Thursday, April 26, 2012

Book Review: Psychology's Ghosts - WSJ.com

Book Review: Psychology's Ghosts - WSJ.com


  • BOOKSHELF


  • April 25, 2012, 6:05 p.m. ET

  • Psychology and Its Discontents

    We see an area in the brain 'light up' when we think about a topic, and assume we know something about thought. But what, exactly?


    In his long and distinguished career, Jerome Kagan, now emeritus professor of psychology at Harvard, has written numerous books for general audiences on major discoveries and controversies in his field, particularly in his specialty of child development. In works such as "Three Seductive Ideas" (1998), he developed a style of discussing three or four different topics in a series of essays, interweaving each with data and observations across psychology, history and culture, and tying them together with an overarching theme. Or not.
    Mr. Kagan's latest effort, "Psychology's Ghosts," might be called "Four Seductive Ideas," since it consists of his assessment of four problems in psychological theory and clinical practice. The first problem is laid out in the chapter "Missing Contexts": the fact that many researchers fail to consider that their measurements of brains, behavior and self-reported experience are profoundly influenced by their subjects' culture, class and experience, as well as by the situation in which the research is conducted. This is not a new concern, but it takes on a special urgency in this era of high-tech inspired biological reductionism.
    If we can find which area of the brain lights up when we think about love or chocolate or politics, we assume we know something. But what, exactly, do we know? Sometimes less than we think. "An adolescent's feeling of shame because a parent is uneducated, unemployed, and alcoholic," Mr. Kagan writes, "cannot be translated into words or phrases that name only the properties of genes, proteins, neurons, neurotransmitters, hormones, receptors, and circuits without losing a substantial amount of meaning"—and meaning is as fundamental to psychology as genes are to biology. Many psychological concepts, he notes, including fear, self-regulation, well-being and agreeableness, are studied without regard to the context in which they occur—with the resulting implication that they mean the same thing across time, cultures and content. They do not.
    In his second essay, "Happiness Ascendant," Mr. Kagan virtually demolishes the popular academic effort to measure "subjective well-being," let alone to measure and compare the level of happiness of entire nations. No psychologist, he observes, would accept as reliable your own answer to the question: "How good is your memory?" Whether your answer is "great" or "terrible," you have no way of knowing whether your memory of your memories is accurate. But psychologists, Mr. Kagan argues, are willing to accept people's answer to how happy they are as if it "is an accurate measure of a psychological state whose definition remains fuzzy."

    Psychology's Ghosts

    By Jerome Kagan
    (Yale, 392 pages, $32)
    Many people will tell you that having many friends, a fortune or freedom is essential to happiness, but Mr. Kagan believes they are wrong. "A fundamental requirement for feelings of serenity and satisfaction," Mr. Kagan says, is "commitment to a few unquestioned ethical beliefs" and the confidence that one lives in a community and country that promote justice and fair play. "Even four-year-olds have a tantrum," he notes, "if a parent violates their sense of fairness." His diagnosis of the "storm of hostility" felt by Americans on the right and left, and the depression and anomie among so many young people, is that this essential requirement has been frustrated by the bleak events of the past decades. War, corruption, the housing bubble and the financial crisis, not to mention the fact that so many of those responsible have not been held unaccountable, have eroded optimism, pride and the fundamental need to believe the world is fair.
    In the third and fourth essays, "Who Is Mentally Ill?" and "Helping the Mentally Ill," Mr. Kagan turns to the intransigent problems of psychiatric diagnosis and treatment. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders is going ungently into its fifth edition, accompanied by a cacophony of complaints from inside and outside the psychiatric establishment. The DSM "regards every intense bout of sadness or worry, no matter what their origin, as a possible sign of mental disorder," Mr. Kagan laments. But "most of these illness categories are analogous to complaints of headaches or cramps. Physicians can decide on the best treatment for a headache only after they have determined its cause. The symptom alone is an insufficient guide."
    Nonetheless, the DSM is primarily a collection of symptoms, overlooking the context in which a symptom such as anxiety or low sexual desire occurs and what it means to an individual. It might mean nothing at all. What it means to an American might mean nothing to a Japanese. The same one-size-fits-all approach plagues treatment: "Most drugs can be likened to a blow on the head," Mr. Kagan observes—they are blunt instruments, not precisely tailored remedies. Psychotherapy depends largely on the client's belief that it will be helpful, which is why all therapies help some people and some people are not helped by any. No experience affects everyone equally—including natural disasters, abuse, having a cruel parent, losing a job or having an illicit affair—though many therapists wish us to believe the opposite.
    Mr. Kagan acknowledges that his critiques are not new, that others have made the same arguments—about the failure to consider cultural influences, about the exasperating DSM, about the flaws in happiness research and the negative side of positive psychology, about the medicalizing of normal problems in living. Yet he makes his case persuasively and readably, with extensive empirical support. For a public enamored of looking inward to genes, brain circuits and medications to find solutions to the problems that plague us privately and politically, the message that most of those solutions require us to look outward—to culture, class and context—can't be repeated often enough.
    Ms. Tavris, a social psychologist, is co-author, with Elliot Aronson, of "Mistakes Were Made (But Not by Me)."

    NIMH's Joel Kleinman on the Brain's Genes - YouTube

    NIMH's Joel Kleinman on the Brain's Genes - YouTube


    Uploaded by on Nov 16, 2011
    Dr. Joel Kleinman explains when and where genes turn on in the brain

    Category:

    Tags:

    NIMHgov - YouTube

    NIMHgov - YouTube

    NIMH · Director's Biography

    NIMH · Director's Biography

    Director's Biography

    Thomas R. Insel, Director of NIMHThomas R. Insel, M.D., is Director of the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), the component of the National Institutes of Health charged with generating the knowledge needed to understand, treat, and prevent mental disorders. His tenure at NIMH has been distinguished by groundbreaking findings in the areas of practical clinical trials, autism research, and the role of genetics in mental illnesses.
    Prior to his appointment as NIMH Director in the Fall 2002, Dr. Insel was Professor of Psychiatry at Emory University. There, he was founding director of the Center for Behavioral Neuroscience, one of the largest science and technology centers funded by the National Science Foundation and, concurrently, director of an NIH-funded Center for Autism Research. From 1994 to 1999, he was Director of the Yerkes Regional Primate Research Center in Atlanta. While at Emory, Dr. Insel continued the line of research he had initiated at NIMH studying the neurobiology of complex social behaviors. He has published over 250 scientific articles and four books, including the Neurobiology of Parental Care (with Michael Numan) in 2003.
    Dr. Insel has served on numerous academic, scientific, and professional committees and boards. He is a member of the Institute of Medicine, a fellow of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology, and is a recipient of several awards including the Outstanding Service Award from the U.S. Public Health Service. Dr. Insel graduated from the combined B.A.-M.D. program at Boston University in 1974. He did his internship at Berkshire Medical Center, Pittsfield, Massachusetts, and his residency at the Langley Porter Neuropsychiatric Institute at the University of California, San Francisco.

    NIMH · The Future of Psychiatry (= Clinical Neuroscience)

    NIMH · The Future of Psychiatry (= Clinical Neuroscience)

    Director’s Blog
    April 20, 2012

    The Future of Psychiatry (= Clinical Neuroscience)

    Last week a short piece in the British medical journal, The Lancet, described an “identity crisis” in psychiatry. In the U.K., the number of medical students choosing psychiatry has dropped more than 50 percent since 2009 and over the past decade the number of psychiatrists has dropped by 26 percent while the number of physicians overall has increased more than 31 percent. Ninety-five percent of posts for junior physicians across all specialties are generally filled; but psychiatry posts, as of last summer, were running more than one third unfilled.
    Tom Brown, Assistant Registrar of Recruitment at the Royal College of Psychiatrists, U.K., told The Lancet: “Common perceptions within the medical profession include the view that psychiatry is just not scientific enough, is too remote from the rest of medicine, is often viewed negatively by other medical professionals, and is a specialty too often characterised by difficult doctor-patient relationships and limited success rates of therapeutic interventions.”
    Meanwhile, psychiatry in the U.S. is undergoing a quiet resurgence which appears to run counter to the British experience. This might not have been apparent last month at match day, the day when medical students match with their post-graduate residencies. Match day is always a moment to track the popularity of different medical specialties. This year, slightly less than 4 percent of graduating students chose psychiatry, which is a bit lower than recent years. But this number hides an extraordinary trend: psychiatry has become the hot specialty for MD-PhD students who want to do research.
    The number of MD-PhD students choosing psychiatry has more than doubled in the past decade. This year, 50 percent of the students who matched with the Yale psychiatry residency were MD-PhDs. At Columbia, 20 percent of psychiatric residents in recent years have been MD-PhDs. In other psychiatry residency programs, while the number of applicants has not increased, the number of MD-PhDs has. Why is this important? Getting into an MD-PhD training program is even more competitive than getting into medical school. The training includes intensive research experience, and many (but not all) graduates go on to do independent research either in the clinic or in a laboratory setting. In the past, most of these elite students have chosen a medical specialty such as oncology or a high paying surgical specialty such as ophthalmology.
    Why are they now selecting psychiatry? I asked this question at Brain Camp a couple weeks ago. Each year, NIMH runs a 4-day intensive Brain Camp for some of the top physicians in their second year of psychiatric residency training. The faculty, including Nobel laureates and other distinguished scientists, describe recent insights from neuroscience relevant to the problems facing psychiatric residents. The residents, who are still at a very early stage of their training, are challenged with charting the future of psychiatry. The result is one of the most inspiring 4 days of the year for all of us who attend.
    This year, 11 of the 17 psychiatric residents at Brain Camp were MD-PhDs. Many had been neuroscience majors in college, had published high impact papers in medical school, and were continuing to do research during their clinical training. Prior to residency, all 17 were medical students who had been at the top of their class and could have gone into any specialty. When I asked them why they had chosen psychiatry instead of another specialty, I heard various reasons but they all agreed that psychiatry is the specialty where they can have the greatest impact. To paraphrase, one student said, “The questions are profound, the patients are fascinating, and the tools are finally available to make unprecedented progress.” Another told me confidently, “This is the place to make a mark.”
    These brilliant young scientists have mostly come from a neuroscience background. They are but a few of the gifted and committed trainees currently in the pipeline who have been attracted to psychiatry in the U.S. They see psychiatry as the natural application of their interest in how the brain works. They want to transform psychiatry into clinical neuroscience, not with less of a commitment to clinical excellence but with a great commitment to developing a new scientific basis for clinical care. This year Brain Camp was largely focused on neuromodulation—using cognitive training and repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS)—to alter symptoms of depression and anxiety by modulating specific brain circuits. For this new generation, psychiatry already is clinical neuroscience.
    So maybe there is an identity crisis for psychiatry in the U.S. as well as the U.K. But the U.S. version seems filled with hope and excitement, with many of the best and brightest now deciding that they can bring new approaches to help people challenged by mental illness.

    References

    Lancet. 2012 Apr 7;379(9823):1274.

    Wednesday, April 25, 2012

    Psychiatry's identity crisis : The Lancet | New research shows that the genetic material, or DNA, of children who experienced violence shows the type of wear and tear that is normally associated with advancing age - General Psychiatry News Review - Mike Nova's starred items - 9:57 PM 4/25/2012

    Google Reader - Mike Nova's starred items

    Mike Nova's starred items

    Psychiatry's identity crisis : The Lancet

    The Lancet, Volume 379, Issue 9823, Page 1274, 7 April 2012
    doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60540-6Cite or Link Using DOI

    Psychiatry's identity crisis

    Original Text
    The Lancet
    Last week, the American Psychiatric Association issued a press release highlighting an ongoing decline in the recruitment of medical students into the specialty—at a time when the numbers of practising psychiatric professionals in the USA is falling. Various reasons are proposed, including the short-term nature of placements (usually just 4 weeks); the sheer breadth of an evolving specialty, which is drawing students towards newer areas such as clinical neuroscience; and concerns that psychiatry is not as lucrative as other specialties.
    Tom Brown, Assistant Registrar of Recruitment at the Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCPsych), UK, views psychiatry's identity crisis as an international problem, and for profound reasons. He told The Lancet: “Common perceptions within the medical profession include the view that psychiatry is just not scientific enough, is too remote from the rest of medicine, is often viewed negatively by other medical professionals, and is a specialty too often characterised by difficult doctor—patient relationships and limited success rates of therapeutic interventions”.
    So, what kind of therapy is psychiatry in need of? The RCPsych views the current problem crucial enough for a concerted campaign to promote the specialty, not just to medical students and doctors at foundation stage, but even to senior-school pupils studying psychology. While such initiatives may help raise the profile of psychiatry, perhaps there are more fundamental issues that need to change.
    Psychiatrists, first and foremost, are clinicians. Evidence-based approaches should be at the core of the psychiatrist and non-clinical members of any mental health team. The evidence that psychiatric patients have poorer overall health than the general population should ensure that psychiatry is strongly connected to other medical specialties. But more fundamental still, it is time for the specialty to stop devaluing itself because of its chequered history of mental asylums and pseudo-science, and to realign itself as a key biomedical specialty at the heart of mental health.

    via The Lancet by The Lancet on 4/6/12
    Last week, the American Psychiatric Association issued a press release highlighting an ongoing decline in the recruitment of medical students into the specialty—at a time when the numbers of practising psychiatric professionals in the USA is falling. Various reasons are proposed, including the short-term nature of placements (usually just 4 weeks); the sheer breadth of an evolving specialty, which is drawing students towards newer areas such as clinical neuroscience; and concerns that psychiatry is not as lucrative as other specialties.

    via international psychiatry - Google Blog Search by dave traxson on 4/23/12
    "PSYCHIATRY'S INTERNATIONAL IDENTITY CRISIS" - THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF PSYCHIATRISTS - OUT OF THE HORSES MOUTH - RECRUITMENT FALLS AS THEY REALISE PSYCHIATRY IS NOT SCIENTIFIC ...


    Daily Mail

    Chronic cocaine use may speed up aging of brain
    Medical Xpress
    New research by scientists at the University of Cambridge suggests that chronic cocaine abuse accelerates the process of brain ageing. The study, published today 25 April in Molecular Psychiatry, found that age-related loss of grey matter in the brain ...
    Cocaine rots your brain: Using Class A drug double's ageing process of grey matterDaily Mail

    all 13 news articles »


    USA TODAY

    Kids Exposed to Bullying, Violence May Age Faster
    WebMD
    New research shows that the genetic material, or DNA, of children who experienced violence shows the type of wear and tear that is normally associated with advancing age. "Children who experience extreme violence at a young age have a biological age ...
    Childhood Violence Causes Premature DNA AgeingGizmodo
    Childhood Violence May Accelerate The Aging ProcessMedical News Today
    Violence puts wear and tear on kids' DNAMedical Xpress
    World Science
    all 27 news articles »

    The Moving Frontier of the Social Sciences. By Admin | Published: 2012/04/24. Mattei Dogan. The International Handbook of Sociology. 2000. SAGE Publications. The extraordinary development of all sciences during the last half of the century has brought with it multiple specializations and ramifications. Such a ... Social psychology, political sociology, human ecology and political economy have long been recognized, whereas social psychiatry is still having to fight for acceptance.

    via international psychiatry - Google Blog Search by Tamar Schwartz on 4/24/12
    It illustrates the killing of the capacity to feel joy in another human being which is one way to define what Shengold has called “Soul Murder,” a term well known in psychiatry because it was used as an accusation against his ...

    The small but significant effect of serotonin reuptake inhibitors on repetitive behaviors in autism described in studies may be the result of the selective publication of trial data, research shows.
    Medscape Medical News


    Abuse, violence can alter children's DNA: study
    Montreal Gazette
    Chromosomes of children who were exposed to maternal violence, bullying or physical maltreatment by an adult showed signs of biological aging, researchers reported Tuesday in a study published by the journal Molecular Psychiatry.

    and more »

    This uniquely First World mental health epidemic has resulted in the taxpayer-supported, life-long disabilities of large numbers of psychiatric patients who are now unable to be happy, productive, taxpaying members of society. .... Whitaker and Jackson (among a number of other courageous ground-breaking and whistle-blowing authors who have been essentially black-listed by the mainstream media and even in mainstream medical journals) have proven to most ...

    via NYT > Psychiatry and Psychiatrists by By LAUREN SLATER on 4/19/12
    For a small group of researchers and their patients facing death, psychedelic drugs aren’t a hippie palliative. They’re a new way to approach the most dire time of life.

    Author: Ihsan M. Salloum, Juan E. Mezzich
    Psychiatric Diagnosis: Challenges and Prospects (World Psychiatric Association)

    As one who has little formal training in philosophy, but who has been practicing philosophy without a license (as do, surely, many respected colleagues who resort to the DSM codes primarily for reimbursement), I celebrate the birth of this book ...

    The period of : 24 April 2012 To : 26 April 2012 Location: Jeddah Eighth International Conference of Psychiatry - Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, 24 to 26 April.


    Exposure to abuse, violence can alter children's DNA: study
    Vancouver Sun
    Chromosomes of children who were exposed to maternal violence, bullying or physical maltreatment by an adult showed signs of biological aging, researchers reported Tuesday in a study published by the journal Molecular Psychiatry.

    and more »


    ABC Online

    Fathers just as likely to get baby blues
    ABC Online
    An Australian study, published in the journal of Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, shows postnatal depression hits fathers and mothers equally in the first 12 months of a newborn's life. Young fathers are particularly vulnerable with ...

    and more »


    Telegraph.co.uk

    Fathers at risk of postnatal depression
    ABC Online
    The study, published in the journal of Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, shows postnatal depression hits fathers and mothers equally in the first 12 months of a newborn's life. Young fathers are particularly vulnerable, with those aged ...
    Fathers 'just as likely to suffer postnatal depression'Telegraph.co.uk

    all 5 news articles »


    USA TODAY

    Abuse, violence can alter children's DNA: study
    Canada.com
    Further research has been planned on how shortened telomeres are related to psychiatric diseases, such as anxiety and depression. Sybille Artz, a professor in the University of Victoria's School of Child and Youth Care, has conducted extensive research ...
    Kids Exposed to Bullying, Violence May Age FasterWebMD
    Exposure to violence in children harms DNA, study saysLos Angeles Times

    all 72 news articles »

    Recent domestic and international research suggests that full recovery from schizophrenia and other related psychotic disorders is not only possible, but may actually be the most common outcome given the right conditions, ...

    via international psychiatry journals - Google Blog Search by Cindy on 4/16/12. 1-382. 4. Chen WC Sun YH Lan TH and Chiu HJ (2009). Incidence and Risk Factors of Workplace Violence on Nursing Staffs Caring for Chronic ...

    via Informa Healthcare: International Review of Psychiatry: Table of Contents by alerts@informahealthcare.com (Dinesh Bhugra et al) on 4/20/12
    International Review of Psychiatry, Volume 24, Issue 2, Page 79-80, April 2012.

    Compared with other specialties, psychiatrists earn less but have more overall job satisfaction, according to the 2012 Medscape Physician Compensation Report.
    Medscape Medical News


    PET Scan Readings Lead to Alzheimer's Misdiagnosis
    Medscape
    The research to date has shown varying diagnostic accuracy for PET, said Shipley. The current study sought to determine the accuracy of PET in the community setting, where clinicians are frequently faced with distinguishing demented from normal ...

    and more »


    Protecting your brain: 'Use it or lose it'
    EurekAlert (press release)
    The article appears in Biological Psychiatry, Volume 71, Issue 9 (May 1, 2012), published by Elsevier. Full text of the article is available to credentialed journalists upon request; contact Rhiannon Bugno at +1 214 648 0880 or Biol.

    and more »


    Protecting your brain: 'Use it or lose it'
    EurekAlert (press release)
    In accord with this mission, this peer-reviewed, rapid-publication, international journal publishes both basic and clinical contributions from all disciplines and research areas relevant to the pathophysiology and treatment of major psychiatric ...

    and more »

    via NYT > Anders Behring Breivik by By ALAN COWELL on 4/22/12
    The trial of Anders Behring Breivik, who openly boasted of killing 77 people, seemed to redefine the banality of evil, recast for our time into images of the mundane.

    56th Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, PA – May 3 – 5, 2012. Psychodynamics in Contemporary Psychiatry: Mutual Influences Philadelphia, PA May 3-5, 2012. Click here to view the preliminary program for the Annual Meeting ...

    25 Ihsan al-Issa and Brigitta al-Issa, “Psychiatric Problems in a Developing Country: Iraq,” International Journal of Social Psychiatry 16 (1969): 15-24. 26 Charles Lindholm, Generosity and Jealousy: The Swat Pukhtun of ...

    via international psychiatry journals - Google Blog Search by recoverynetwork:Toronto on 4/25/12
    British Journal of Psychiatry 2011; 199: 29-37. Note The International Congress of the Royal College of Psychiatrists 2011, 28 June – 1 July, Brighton Source: Royal College of Psychiatrists. Read original article at Medical ...


    Protecting your brain: 'Use it or lose it'
    EurekAlert (press release)
    In accord with this mission, this peer-reviewed, rapid-publication, international journal publishes both basic and clinical contributions from all disciplines and research areas relevant to the pathophysiology and treatment of major psychiatric ...

    and more »


    The AP's Well-deserved Pulitzer Prize
    Huffington Post (blog)
    The articles appear to belie the department's justification for the spying, which has become the mantra of Police Commissioner Ray Kelly and Mayor Michael Bloomberg: "We only follow leads." The articles also caught police spokesman Paul Browne in yet ...


    Violence ages kid's DNA, shortens their chromosomes
    Detroit Free Press
    The latest trick to emerge from the Detroit International Bridge Co.'- 1:04 am Study finds that exposure to violence can cause changes in DNA leading to seven to 10 years of premature aging. / PhotoDisc via USA Today By Liz Szabo Conventional wisdom ...

    and more »


    Charges Dropped Against Scientology Executive Jan Eastgate
    Village Voice (blog)
    Jan Eastgate is the international head of the Citizen's Commission on Human Rights an organisation founded by the Church of Scientology to campaign against psychiatry. Jan Eastgate has refused to talk to Lateline. She has consistently denied Carmen ...

    and more »

    via Psychology, Philosophy and Real Life by Dr George Simon, PhD on 4/24/12
    Photo by whologwhy - http://flic.kr/p/7Hv2kh
    Throughout life, we are confronted with tests of character. Each one brings the task and opportunity to survive and become stronger. At these times, faith can help us toward becoming the person we want to be.
    Tags: , , ,


    PsychCentral.com

    New Findings Support Theory that Smoking Causes Depression
    PsychCentral.com
    By Traci Pedersen Associate News Editor Current heavy smokers are at three times greater risk for major depression compared to former heavy smokers, according to a study published in the Journal of Psychiatric Research. Although the link between ...

    and more »

    Psychiatric Diagnosis: Challenges and Prospects: Patterns and Prospects (World Psychiatric Association) by Ihsan M. Salloum, Juan E. Mezzich

    Detail:

    Psychiatric Diagnosis: Challenges and Prospects: Patterns and Prospects (World Psychiatric Association)

    Psychiatric Diagnosis: Challenges and Prospects: Patterns and Prospects (World Psychiatric Association)

    Product Description

    Psychiatric diagnosis is one of the most important topics within the broad field of psychiatry. Clear, accurate definitions of the various disorders are essential for clinicians around the world to be confident that they are classifying patients in the same way, thereby enabling comparisons of treatment regimens and their outcomes. There are two major classification systems in use, one produced by the World Health Organization, the WHO International Classification of Diseases, Mental Disorders Chapter, and one by the American Psychiatric Association, the well known Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Both of these are being revised so this book from the prestigious World Psychiatric Association is especially timely.In this book, leading experts in the field provide a broad and integrated coverage of the concepts, structure and context of psychiatric diagnosis. It begins by addressing mental health and illness around the world from historical, philosophical and cultural perspectives. Health is approached comprehensively, to include such aspects as resilience, resources and quality of life. The book then covers major specific psychopathology topics in Section II, including new categorizations and dimensional approaches. Section III concentrates on the complex problem of comorbidity, a primary challenge for modern diagnostic classifications in psychiatry. Finally, Section IV reviews emerging international diagnostic systems in psychiatry, considering innovative models and adaptations.This book will be essential reading for anyone involved in the diagnosis of psychiatric disorders.

    From the Back Cover

    Improved diagnostic systems are necessary to enhance clinical care, teaching and research. Written by leading experts in the field, this book provides broad, integrated coverage of psychiatric diagnosis from historical and conceptual roots to novel diagnostic approaches.Divided into four accessible sections, the book covers: Concepts of mental health and illness around the world from historical, philosophical and cultural perspectives. Health is approached comprehensively, to include such aspects as resilience, resources and quality of life Major specific psychopathology topics, including new categorizations and dimensional approaches The complex problem of comorbidity in mental and general health, a major challenge for modern diagnostic classifications in psychiatry Emerging international diagnostic systems in psychiatry, considering innovative models and adaptationsPsychiatric Diagnosis: Challenges and Prospects presents innovative and helpful models for improved evaluation and care and should be read by all mental health professionals, as well as practising clinicians, researchers and postgraduate students in psychiatry and psychology.

    Psychiatry's identity crisis : The Lancet

    Psychiatry's identity crisis : The Lancet

    The Lancet, Volume 379, Issue 9823, Page 1274, 7 April 2012
    doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60540-6Cite or Link Using DOI

    Psychiatry's identity crisis

    The Lancet
    Last week, the American Psychiatric Association issued a press release highlighting an ongoing decline in the recruitment of medical students into the specialty—at a time when the numbers of practising psychiatric professionals in the USA is falling. Various reasons are proposed, including the short-term nature of placements (usually just 4 weeks); the sheer breadth of an evolving specialty, which is drawing students towards newer areas such as clinical neuroscience; and concerns that psychiatry is not as lucrative as other specialties.
    Tom Brown, Assistant Registrar of Recruitment at the Royal College of Psychiatrists (RCPsych), UK, views psychiatry's identity crisis as an international problem, and for profound reasons. He told The Lancet: “Common perceptions within the medical profession include the view that psychiatry is just not scientific enough, is too remote from the rest of medicine, is often viewed negatively by other medical professionals, and is a specialty too often characterised by difficult doctor—patient relationships and limited success rates of therapeutic interventions”.
    So, what kind of therapy is psychiatry in need of? The RCPsych views the current problem crucial enough for a concerted campaign to promote the specialty, not just to medical students and doctors at foundation stage, but even to senior-school pupils studying psychology. While such initiatives may help raise the profile of psychiatry, perhaps there are more fundamental issues that need to change.
    Psychiatrists, first and foremost, are clinicians. Evidence-based approaches should be at the core of the psychiatrist and non-clinical members of any mental health team. The evidence that psychiatric patients have poorer overall health than the general population should ensure that psychiatry is strongly connected to other medical specialties. But more fundamental still, it is time for the specialty to stop devaluing itself because of its chequered history of mental asylums and pseudo-science, and to realign itself as a key biomedical specialty at the heart of mental health.
     

    Psychiatric Diagnosis: Challenges and Prospects: Patterns and Prospects (World Psychiatric Association) by Ihsan M. Salloum, Juan E. Mezzich

    Psychiatric Diagnosis: Challenges and Prospects: Patterns and Prospects (World Psychiatric Association) by Ihsan M. Salloum, Juan E. Mezzich

    Detail:

    Psychiatric Diagnosis: Challenges and Prospects: Patterns and Prospects (World Psychiatric Association)

    Product Description

    Psychiatric diagnosis is one of the most important topics within the broad field of psychiatry. Clear, accurate definitions of the various disorders are essential for clinicians around the world to be confident that they are classifying patients in the same way, thereby enabling comparisons of treatment regimens and their outcomes. There are two major classification systems in use, one produced by the World Health Organization, the WHO International Classification of Diseases, Mental Disorders Chapter, and one by the American Psychiatric Association, the well known Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Both of these are being revised so this book from the prestigious World Psychiatric Association is especially timely.In this book, leading experts in the field provide a broad and integrated coverage of the concepts, structure and context of psychiatric diagnosis. It begins by addressing mental health and illness around the world from historical, philosophical and cultural perspectives. Health is approached comprehensively, to include such aspects as resilience, resources and quality of life. The book then covers major specific psychopathology topics in Section II, including new categorizations and dimensional approaches. Section III concentrates on the complex problem of comorbidity, a primary challenge for modern diagnostic classifications in psychiatry. Finally, Section IV reviews emerging international diagnostic systems in psychiatry, considering innovative models and adaptations.This book will be essential reading for anyone involved in the diagnosis of psychiatric disorders.

    From the Back Cover

    Improved diagnostic systems are necessary to enhance clinical care, teaching and research. Written by leading experts in the field, this book provides broad, integrated coverage of psychiatric diagnosis from historical and conceptual roots to novel diagnostic approaches.Divided into four accessible sections, the book covers: Concepts of mental health and illness around the world from historical, philosophical and cultural perspectives. Health is approached comprehensively, to include such aspects as resilience, resources and quality of life Major specific psychopathology topics, including new categorizations and dimensional approaches The complex problem of comorbidity in mental and general health, a major challenge for modern diagnostic classifications in psychiatry Emerging international diagnostic systems in psychiatry, considering innovative models and adaptationsPsychiatric Diagnosis: Challenges and Prospects presents innovative and helpful models for improved evaluation and care and should be read by all mental health professionals, as well as practising clinicians, researchers and postgraduate students in psychiatry and psychology.