Description

Book Synopsis
This book is an ethnographic account of the practice of clinical psychology under the auspices of the reductionism of biomedicine. Sylvia Olney uses Peircean linguistic analyses to naturalize consciousness by validating the dimensions of mind and intention to restore psychotherapy to its place as a significant healing art.

Trade Review
The conditions of psychotherapy have changed significantly in the biomedical era. This useful and thoughtful book explains how those changes work from the inside, and how they alter the moral climate of care itself. -- Tanya Luhrmann, Stanford University
Dr. Olney has captured the fundamental contradictions within the system of capitalistic health care. The economic powerhouses of insurance and pharmacy companies now drive everything from diagnoses, to treatment plans, to the personal philosophies of the practitioners in the direction of profit rather than the direction of healthy patients/clients. The managed care and best practices required by insurance companies and supported by pharmaceutical companies selectively ignore large areas of psychological research while emphasizing brief and biologically-based treatments. Interestingly, Olney’s deeply probing interviews with mental health practitioners suggest that in spite of these powerful economic influences, a humanistic undercurrent continues to thrive as a kind of underground opposition. Her interviewees reveal their willingness to play the CBT/medication game for insurance reimbursement while believing that empathy, human connection, and self-awareness carry tremendous power for healing. The book provides a fascinating view of cynical practice being undermined by humanist care. -- Marsha Driscoll, Bemidji State University

Table of Contents
List of Figures and Tables Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: Ethnopsychiatry and Human Awareness Chapter 2: The Heart and Soul of the Matter Chapter 3: Attempts at Explanation Chapter 4: Getting by with a Little Help Chapter 5: Seeing through a Glass Darkly Chapter 6: Getting Real Chapter 7: Making Meaning out of Madness Chapter 8: Lower than Angels Bibliography Appendix About the Author

Medicalization of Psychotherapy Practicing Under

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A Hardback by Sylvia Olney

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    View other formats and editions of Medicalization of Psychotherapy Practicing Under by Sylvia Olney

    Publisher: Lexington Books
    Publication Date: 4/8/2015 12:00:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9780739197028, 978-0739197028
    ISBN10: 0739197029

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    This book is an ethnographic account of the practice of clinical psychology under the auspices of the reductionism of biomedicine. Sylvia Olney uses Peircean linguistic analyses to naturalize consciousness by validating the dimensions of mind and intention to restore psychotherapy to its place as a significant healing art.

    Trade Review
    The conditions of psychotherapy have changed significantly in the biomedical era. This useful and thoughtful book explains how those changes work from the inside, and how they alter the moral climate of care itself. -- Tanya Luhrmann, Stanford University
    Dr. Olney has captured the fundamental contradictions within the system of capitalistic health care. The economic powerhouses of insurance and pharmacy companies now drive everything from diagnoses, to treatment plans, to the personal philosophies of the practitioners in the direction of profit rather than the direction of healthy patients/clients. The managed care and best practices required by insurance companies and supported by pharmaceutical companies selectively ignore large areas of psychological research while emphasizing brief and biologically-based treatments. Interestingly, Olney’s deeply probing interviews with mental health practitioners suggest that in spite of these powerful economic influences, a humanistic undercurrent continues to thrive as a kind of underground opposition. Her interviewees reveal their willingness to play the CBT/medication game for insurance reimbursement while believing that empathy, human connection, and self-awareness carry tremendous power for healing. The book provides a fascinating view of cynical practice being undermined by humanist care. -- Marsha Driscoll, Bemidji State University

    Table of Contents
    List of Figures and Tables Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter 1: Ethnopsychiatry and Human Awareness Chapter 2: The Heart and Soul of the Matter Chapter 3: Attempts at Explanation Chapter 4: Getting by with a Little Help Chapter 5: Seeing through a Glass Darkly Chapter 6: Getting Real Chapter 7: Making Meaning out of Madness Chapter 8: Lower than Angels Bibliography Appendix About the Author

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