Description
Book SynopsisAre you unsure what to ask in a psychiatric clinical interview and how to ask it? Are you a medical student or trainee doctor that needs a fast hands-on guide to psychiatry? This handbook sets out clinical interviewing skills and clinical tips so you can deliver essential psychiatric care with confidence. Almost all medical graduates will encounter patients with mental health issues in general medical and surgical settings. Practical Psychiatry for Students and Trainees provides the foundational skillset you need for interviewing, assessing, and initially managing a patient with mental health issues. Organised into 19 short chapters, this resource leads you logically from how to interview a patient, to the psychiatric conditions likely to be encountered and their treatments. Packed with practical tips and clinical cases from a variety of medical professionals, this text delivers clear guidance and skills. Written by an experienced psychiatrist and a psychiatric trainee, this book provides you with the core knowledge and skills needed to deliver self-assured care to patients with mental health needs.
Trade ReviewThis is a welcome addition to the literature for medical students, newly qualified doctors and very early career psychiatrists. As well as covering basic key clinical skills and information in an accessible way it provides extremely useful material on professionalism and self-care. This will be invaluable to all doctors starting out and beginning to discover the complexity and rewarding field of psychiatry * Kate Lovett, Immediate Past Dean Royal College of Psychiatrists *
This is an excellent, highly practical book for both medical students and for doctors at the early stages of their postgraduate training in psychiatry. It provides a highly readable overview of the key clinical areas, with use of mnemonics and valuable practical tips such as how to set up the clinical interview and sample phrasing of difficult to ask questions. This is combined with relevant reference to the underlying phenomenology and the evidence base. * Anne Doherty, Consultant Liaison Psychiatrist, Editor in Chief, Books Programme, Royal College of Psychiatrists, UK *
Table of Contents1: The Clinical Interview - Setting the Scene 2: The Psychiatric History - What to Ask 3: Mental State Examination 4: Proposing a Diagnosis: Classification, Formulation and Investigations 5: Personality Disorders 6: Mood Disorders 7: Psychotic Disorders 8: Anxiety and Obsessional Disorders 9: Eating Disorders 10: Psychoactive Substance Use 11: Psychiatry of Later Life 12: Child & Adolescent & Perinatal Psychiatry 13: Psychiatry of Intellectual Disability 14: Psychological Medicine (Hospital Psychiatry) 15: Forensic Perspectives in General Psychiatry 16: Psychological Treatments 17: Physical Treatments 18: Emergencies: Urgent, Serious and High Risk Scenarios in Psychiatry 19: Professionalism, Boundaries and Well-Being