Description

Book Synopsis
The American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology and the Accrediting Council on Graduate Medical Education identify interviewing skills as a core competency for psychiatric residents. This title offers an approach to this topic that fulfills the need for training in biopsychosocial assessment and diagnosis.

Trade Review

“This book is not only a first rate introduction for psychiatric residents and medical students interested in psychiatry but arguably should be a mandatory reading for all medical students given the importance of general interviewing skills, the prominence of psychiatric issues throughout medicine, and the importance of the techniques presented for building the foundations of the physician-patient relationship.” (Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1 December 2014)



Table of Contents

Contributors ix

Preface xi

Acknowledgments xiii

Chapter 1 Listening to the Patient 1

Listening: The Key Skill in Psychiatry 1

The Primary Tools: Words, Analogies, Metaphors, Similes, and Symbols 3

How Does One Hear Words in This Way? 4

Listening as More Than Hearing 6

Common Blocks to Effective Listening 7

Crucial Attitudes That Enable Effective Listening 10

Theoretical Perspectives on Listening 14

Using Oneself in Listening 16

To Be Found: The Psychological Product of Being Heard 18

Listening to Oneself to Listen Better 20

Listening in Special Clinical Situations 23

Growing and Maturing as a Listener 26

Chapter 2 Physician–Patient Relationship 31

Formation of the Physician–Patient Relationship 34

Special Issues in the Physician–Patient Relationship 42

The Physician–Patient Relationship in Specific Populations of Patients 44

Conclusion 46

Chapter 3 The Cultural Context of Clinical Assessment 47

Introduction: The Cultural Matrix of Psychiatry 47

What Is Culture? 48

Culture and Gender 50

The Cultural Formulation 51

Ethnocultural Identity 52

Illness Explanations and Help-Seeking 53

Psychosocial Environment and Levels of Functioning 55

Clinician–Patient Relationship 56

Overall Assessment 57

Cultural Competence 57

Working with Interpreters and Culture-Brokers 60

Conclusion: The Limits of Culture 62

Chapter 4 The Psychiatric Interview: Settings and Techniques 65

Goals of the Psychiatric Interview 66

The Psychiatric Database 75

Database Components 77

Mental Status Examination 81

Conduct of the Interview: Factors That Affect the Interview 83

General Features of Psychiatric Interviews 85

Chapter 5 Psychiatric Interviews: Special Populations 103
Randon Welton and Jerald Kay

Psychiatric Interview in Special Circumstances 104

Psychiatric Interview in Special Patient Populations 115

Conclusions 131

Chapter 6 Formulation 135
Allison Cowan, Randon Welton and Jerald Kay

Biological Contributions 136

Social Factors 138

Psychological Factors 140

Summary 146

Chapter 7 Clinical Evaluation and Treatment Planning: A Multimodal Approach 147

Psychiatric Interview 147

Identifying Information 149

Chief Complaint 149

History of Present Illness 150

Past Psychiatric History 150

Personal History 150

Family History 151

Medical History 152

Substance Use History 152

Mental Status Examination 153

Physical Examination 157

Neurological Examination 158

Psychological and Neuropsychological Testing 159

Structured Clinical Instruments and Rating Scales 159

Laboratory Assessments 159

Neurophysiologic Assessment 159

Brain Imaging 162

Special Assessment Techniques 163

Assessment of Risk 164

Suicide Risk 164

Differential Diagnosis 167

Initial Treatment Plan 170

Conclusion 171

Chapter 8 Professional Ethics and Boundaries 173

Introduction 173

Ethical Behavior and Its Relationship to the Professional Attitude 174

WPA Guidelines on Euthanasia 176

WPA Guidelines on Torture 177

WPA Guidelines on Sex Selection 177

WPA Guidelines on Organ Transplantation 177

WPA Guidelines on Genetic Research and Counseling in Psychiatric Patients 177

WPA Guidelines on Ethnic Discrimination and Ethnic Cleansing 178

WPA Guidelines on Psychiatrists Addressing the Media 178

The Coherent Treatment Frame and the Role of Therapeutic Boundaries in Effective Psychiatric Treatment 178

Boundary Violations 179

Components of the Coherent Psychiatric Frame 180

Stability 181

Avoiding Dual Relationships 182

Autonomy and Neutrality 183

Coherent and Noncollusive Compensation 183

Confidentiality 184

Anonymity 184

Abstinence 185

Self-respect and Self-protection 186

Summary 187

Index 191

The Psychiatric Interview

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    A Hardback by Allan Tasman, Jerald Kay, Robert Ursano

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      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 12/07/2013
      ISBN13: 9781119976233, 978-1119976233
      ISBN10: 1119976235

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology and the Accrediting Council on Graduate Medical Education identify interviewing skills as a core competency for psychiatric residents. This title offers an approach to this topic that fulfills the need for training in biopsychosocial assessment and diagnosis.

      Trade Review

      “This book is not only a first rate introduction for psychiatric residents and medical students interested in psychiatry but arguably should be a mandatory reading for all medical students given the importance of general interviewing skills, the prominence of psychiatric issues throughout medicine, and the importance of the techniques presented for building the foundations of the physician-patient relationship.” (Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1 December 2014)



      Table of Contents

      Contributors ix

      Preface xi

      Acknowledgments xiii

      Chapter 1 Listening to the Patient 1

      Listening: The Key Skill in Psychiatry 1

      The Primary Tools: Words, Analogies, Metaphors, Similes, and Symbols 3

      How Does One Hear Words in This Way? 4

      Listening as More Than Hearing 6

      Common Blocks to Effective Listening 7

      Crucial Attitudes That Enable Effective Listening 10

      Theoretical Perspectives on Listening 14

      Using Oneself in Listening 16

      To Be Found: The Psychological Product of Being Heard 18

      Listening to Oneself to Listen Better 20

      Listening in Special Clinical Situations 23

      Growing and Maturing as a Listener 26

      Chapter 2 Physician–Patient Relationship 31

      Formation of the Physician–Patient Relationship 34

      Special Issues in the Physician–Patient Relationship 42

      The Physician–Patient Relationship in Specific Populations of Patients 44

      Conclusion 46

      Chapter 3 The Cultural Context of Clinical Assessment 47

      Introduction: The Cultural Matrix of Psychiatry 47

      What Is Culture? 48

      Culture and Gender 50

      The Cultural Formulation 51

      Ethnocultural Identity 52

      Illness Explanations and Help-Seeking 53

      Psychosocial Environment and Levels of Functioning 55

      Clinician–Patient Relationship 56

      Overall Assessment 57

      Cultural Competence 57

      Working with Interpreters and Culture-Brokers 60

      Conclusion: The Limits of Culture 62

      Chapter 4 The Psychiatric Interview: Settings and Techniques 65

      Goals of the Psychiatric Interview 66

      The Psychiatric Database 75

      Database Components 77

      Mental Status Examination 81

      Conduct of the Interview: Factors That Affect the Interview 83

      General Features of Psychiatric Interviews 85

      Chapter 5 Psychiatric Interviews: Special Populations 103
      Randon Welton and Jerald Kay

      Psychiatric Interview in Special Circumstances 104

      Psychiatric Interview in Special Patient Populations 115

      Conclusions 131

      Chapter 6 Formulation 135
      Allison Cowan, Randon Welton and Jerald Kay

      Biological Contributions 136

      Social Factors 138

      Psychological Factors 140

      Summary 146

      Chapter 7 Clinical Evaluation and Treatment Planning: A Multimodal Approach 147

      Psychiatric Interview 147

      Identifying Information 149

      Chief Complaint 149

      History of Present Illness 150

      Past Psychiatric History 150

      Personal History 150

      Family History 151

      Medical History 152

      Substance Use History 152

      Mental Status Examination 153

      Physical Examination 157

      Neurological Examination 158

      Psychological and Neuropsychological Testing 159

      Structured Clinical Instruments and Rating Scales 159

      Laboratory Assessments 159

      Neurophysiologic Assessment 159

      Brain Imaging 162

      Special Assessment Techniques 163

      Assessment of Risk 164

      Suicide Risk 164

      Differential Diagnosis 167

      Initial Treatment Plan 170

      Conclusion 171

      Chapter 8 Professional Ethics and Boundaries 173

      Introduction 173

      Ethical Behavior and Its Relationship to the Professional Attitude 174

      WPA Guidelines on Euthanasia 176

      WPA Guidelines on Torture 177

      WPA Guidelines on Sex Selection 177

      WPA Guidelines on Organ Transplantation 177

      WPA Guidelines on Genetic Research and Counseling in Psychiatric Patients 177

      WPA Guidelines on Ethnic Discrimination and Ethnic Cleansing 178

      WPA Guidelines on Psychiatrists Addressing the Media 178

      The Coherent Treatment Frame and the Role of Therapeutic Boundaries in Effective Psychiatric Treatment 178

      Boundary Violations 179

      Components of the Coherent Psychiatric Frame 180

      Stability 181

      Avoiding Dual Relationships 182

      Autonomy and Neutrality 183

      Coherent and Noncollusive Compensation 183

      Confidentiality 184

      Anonymity 184

      Abstinence 185

      Self-respect and Self-protection 186

      Summary 187

      Index 191

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