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E-grāmata: Psychiatry: Past, Present, and Prospect

Edited by (School of Psychol), Edited by (Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington DC, USA), Edited by (Emeritus Professor and Honorary Consultant, University of Melbourne and St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia)
  • Formāts: 448 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-May-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191015120
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  • Formāts: 448 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-May-2014
  • Izdevniecība: Oxford University Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191015120
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Psychiatry: Past, Present, and Prospect provides a set of perspectives written in essay form from eminent contributors, covering the major developments in psychiatry over the last 40 years.

Psychiatry: Past, Present, and Prospect brings together perspectives from a group of highly respected psychiatrists, each with decades of experience in clinical practice. The topics covered range from scientific discoveries of all kinds, advances in treatment, and conceptual breakthroughs. The highlights are countered by the field's negative sides: perennial indecisiveness about the boundaries of psychiatry; the limitations of a narrow approach to human suffering; the retreat from the hope of a de-institutionalised, community-based psychiatry; the divide between biological treatments and psychotherapy; the technical and ethical complexities of psychiatric research; and the low priority given to psychiatry, especially but far from exclusively in less developed countries.
The result is a text full of collected wisdom which will promote the curiosity of mental health professionals about key developments in psychiatry over the past half century; sensitize the next generation of mental health professionals to the role they might play in advancing the state of knowledge about mental illness and its treatment during the course of their careers; and serve as a valuable archival resource for scholars.
This collection of viewpoints from very experienced leaders in the field of psychiatry will prove fascinating reading for psychiatrists and allied mental health professionals, such as psychologists, psychiatric social workers, psychiatric nurses and occupational therapists, both trained and in training. It will also offer the interested laity a balanced account of psychiatry's evolution since the 1950s, and its likely prospects in the 21st century.

Recenzijas

I felt that the Editors achieved all of their stated goals in assembling these very readable, inspiring and enlightening essays. * Richard T. White (A senior psychiatrist's perspective), Australasian Psychiatry, 23(2), 2015 * Psychiatry: Past, Present, and Prospect reminds us how diverse and enriching yet ambitious and ambivalent our speciality can be. . . As the editors state in the introduction, this is a book about the elders of psychiatry passing on their wisdom to the next generation of psychiatrists. . . No matter where you are in your career, I believe that you can learn a lot from these words of wisdom by our elders. * Shuichi Suetani (A trainee's perspective), Australasian Psychiatry, 23(2), 2015 * Psychiatry - just like individuals - should ask itself the central existential questions: Where am I now? Where do I come from? Where am I going? This book gives quite a few nuanced and thought-provoking answers to these questions that we psychiatrists should engage ourselves thoroughly with occassionally... The result is a very knowledgeable, readable and critical/charming review of psychiatry's development - knowledge-based, action-related and attitudinal. * Journal of the Norwegian Medical Association * This is a thought-provoking book on the developments in psychiatry since the 1950s, both good and bad, and how they have affected present-day practice and the future course of psychiatry... Readers may not agree with every expert's opinion, but the book provides welcome food for thought. * Doody's Notes * Each contributor writes about his or her personal involvement in the speciality, which is almost always the history of the advancement in that particular field....No matter where you are in your career, I believe that you can learn a lot from these words of wisdom by our elders. * Shuichi Suetani, Australasian Psychiatry, *

Papildus informācija

Highly commended at the BMA Medical Book Awards 2015
Contributors xi
1 Psychiatry and neuroscience 1(21)
Steven E. Hyman
2 The past, present, and future of psychiatric genetics 22(23)
Peter McGuffin
3 Fifty years of applied clinical research: schizophrenia as an example 45(19)
Vishal Bhaysar
Robin M. Murray
4 Social science and psychiatry, and the causes of mental disorders 64(10)
Dana March
Ezra Susser
5 The history of cultural psychiatry in the last half-century 74(22)
Anne E. Becker
Arthur Kleinman
6 History and development of social psychiatry 96(21)
Julian Leff
7 Psychiatry in developed and developing countries 117(16)
Norman Sartorius
8 Fifty years of mental health legislation: paternalism, bound and unbound 133(21)
George Szmukler
9 The ethical dimension in psychiatry 154(26)
Stephen A. Green
Sidney Bloch
10 Defining and classifying mental illness 180(16)
German E. Berrios
11 From alienist to collaborator: the twisting road to consultation-liaison psychiatry 196(23)
Don R. Lipsitt
12 Child and adolescent psychopathology: past scientific achievements and future challenges 219(20)
Michael Rutter
13 Psychiatry of old age 239(24)
Catherine Oppenheimer
14 The forensic psychiatric specialty: from the birth to the subliming 263(15)
Paul E. Mullen
Danny H. Sullivan
15 Trauma and psychiatry 278(20)
Arieh Y. Shalev
16 Psychiatry and the addictions 298(20)
Jerome H. Jaffe
17 Personality disorders 318(17)
Edwin Harari
18 Psychopharmacology 335(20)
Philip B. Mitchell
Dusan Hadzi-Pavlovic
19 Convulsive and non-convulsive treatments in psychiatry 355(11)
Max Fink
20 Cognitive theory and therapy: past, present, and future 366(17)
Aaron T. Beck
David J.A. Dozois
21 Psychodynamic psychiatry—rise, decline, revival 383(20)
Jeremy Holmes
Index 403
Edited by Sidney Bloch, Emeritus Professor and Honorary Consultant, University of Melbourne and St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia, Stephen A. Green, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington DC, USA, and Jeremy Holmes, School of Psychology, University of Exeter, UKContributors: Aaron T. Beck, Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, USAAnne Becker, Harvard University, USAGerman Berrios, Chair of the Epistemology of Psychiatry, Life Fellow, Robinson College, University of Cambridge, UKVishal Bhavsa, Institute of Psychiatry, University of London, UKSidney Bloch, Department of Psychiatry, St Vincent's Hospital, University of Melbourne, Victoria, AustraliaDavid Dozois, Department of Psychology, The University of Western Ontario, London, ON, CanadaStephen A. Green, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington DC, USAMax Fink, Professor of Psychiatry & Neurology Emeritus, Stony Brook University School of Medicine, Long Island NY, USA Dusan Hadzi-Pavlovic, Senior Hospital Scientist, Black Dog Institute, Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick NSW Australia; Conjoint Senior Lecturer, School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Sydney NSW AustraliaEdwin Harari Jeremy Holmes, School of Psychology, University of Exeter, UKSteven Hyman, Harvard University, Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA, USAJerome Jaffe, University of Maryland, USAArthur Kleinman, Harvard University, USAJulian Leff, Institute of Psychiatry, University of London, UKDon Lipsitt, Harvard University, USADana March, Department of Epidemiology, The Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health Columbia University, USAPeter McGuffin, MRC SGDP Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, UKPhilip Mitchell, University of New South Wales, Sydney, AustraliaPaul Mullen, Monash University, Victorian Institute of Forensic Mental Health, AustraliaRobin Murray, Institute of Psychiatry, University of London, UKCatherine Oppenheimer, Consultant Psychiatrist, Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Partnership Mental Healthcare NHS Trust, UK Michael Rutter, MRC SGDP Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London, UKNorman Sartorius, Former Head of Mental Health, World Heath Organization, Geneva, SwitzerlandArieh Y. Shalev, M.D., Department of Psychiatry, Hadassah University Hospital, Jerusalem, IsraelDanny Sullivan, Monash University, Victorian Institute of Forensic Mental Health, AustraliaEzra Susser, Columbia University, USAGeorge Szmukler, Professor of Psychiatry and Society, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, UK