Re-Visioning Psychiatry

Re-Visioning Psychiatry
Author: Laurence J. Kirmayer
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 725
Release: 2015-07-29
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 1107032202

Revisioning Psychiatry brings together new perspectives on the causes and treatment of mental health problems. The contributors emphasize the importance of understanding experience and explore how the brain, the person, and the social world interact to give rise to mental health problems as well as resilience and recovery.

Re-Visioning Psychiatry

Re-Visioning Psychiatry
Author: Laurence J. Kirmayer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 734
Release: 2015
Genre: Mental illness
ISBN: 9781316360613

Re-Visioning Psychiatry brings together new perspectives on the causes and treatment of mental health problems.

Re-visioning Psychiatry

Re-visioning Psychiatry
Author: Constance A. Cummings
Publisher:
Total Pages: 693
Release: 2014
Genre: Mental illness
ISBN: 9781316384619

Re-Visioning Psychiatry explores new theories and models from cultural psychiatry and psychology, philosophy, neuroscience and anthropology that clarify how mental health problems emerge in specific contexts and points toward future integration of these perspectives. Taken together, the contributions point to the need for fundamental shifts in psychiatric theory and practice: • Restoring phenomenology to its rightful place in research and practice • Advancing the social and cultural neuroscience of brain-person-environment systems over time and across social contexts • Understanding how self-awareness, interpersonal interactions, and larger social processes give rise to vicious circles that constitute mental health problems • Locating efforts to help and heal within the local and global social, economic, and political contexts that influence how we frame problems and imagine solutions. In advancing ecosystemic models of mental disorders, contributors challenge reductionistic models and culture-bound perspectives and highlight possibilities for a more transdisciplinary, integrated approach to research, mental health policy, and clinical practice.

Re-Visioning Psychiatry

Re-Visioning Psychiatry
Author: Laurence J. Kirmayer
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 725
Release: 2015-07-29
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1316381013

Re-Visioning Psychiatry explores new theories and models from cultural psychiatry and psychology, philosophy, neuroscience and anthropology that clarify how mental health problems emerge in specific contexts and points toward future integration of these perspectives. Taken together, the contributions point to the need for fundamental shifts in psychiatric theory and practice: • Restoring phenomenology to its rightful place in research and practice • Advancing the social and cultural neuroscience of brain-person-environment systems over time and across social contexts • Understanding how self-awareness, interpersonal interactions, and larger social processes give rise to vicious circles that constitute mental health problems • Locating efforts to help and heal within the local and global social, economic, and political contexts that influence how we frame problems and imagine solutions. In advancing ecosystemic models of mental disorders, contributors challenge reductionistic models and culture-bound perspectives and highlight possibilities for a more transdisciplinary, integrated approach to research, mental health policy, and clinical practice.

Re-Visioning Psychology

Re-Visioning Psychology
Author: James Hillman
Publisher: Harper Collins
Total Pages: 306
Release: 1977-12-28
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 0060905638

This groundbreaking classic explores the necessity of connections between our life and soul and developing the main lines of the soul-making process.

Finding Hope in the Lived Experience of Psychosis

Finding Hope in the Lived Experience of Psychosis
Author: Patte Randal
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 231
Release: 2022-06-30
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1000608786

This book offers first-person accounts of the experience of psychosis from the inside and the outside, through the eyes of two doctors, one of whom has experienced psychosis and both of whom have worked for decades in the field of psychiatry. Underpinned by rigorous academic analysis using an evocative duo-ethnographic approach, the book explores the cultural and subcultural influences from childhood onwards – both traumatic and resilience-building – that have shaped their lives. Both authors reflect on strategies they learned early in life for dealing with challenges, each managing to function at a high level while avoiding awareness of their vulnerability. They reflect on the potential dangers of using their expertise and position of power in psychiatry simply to diagnose mental illness and prescribe medication. The differences and similarities in the authors’ stories provide a productive tension highlighting the complexities of this paradigm shift that is happening in psychiatry. Written in the form of two interacting memoirs, this book is of great interest to researchers, clinicians, and practicing psychologists, as well as a general audience with interest in psychosis.

Re-visioning Family Therapy

Re-visioning Family Therapy
Author: Monica McGoldrick
Publisher: Guilford Press
Total Pages: 501
Release: 2008-07-29
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1593854277

Now in a significantly revised and expanded second edition, this groundbreaking work illuminates how racism, sexism, and other forms of oppression constrain the lives of diverse clients a " and family therapy itself. Practitioners and students gain vital tools for re-evaluating prevailing conceptions of family health and pathology; tapping into clients' cultural resources; and developing more inclusive theories and therapeutic practices. From leaders in the field, the second edition features many new chapters, case examples, and specific recommendations for culturally competent assessment, treatment, and clinical training. The section in which authors reflect on their own cultural and family legacies also has been significantly expanded.

We've Been Too Patient

We've Been Too Patient
Author: L. D. Green
Publisher: North Atlantic Books
Total Pages: 265
Release: 2019-07-09
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1623173612

25 unflinching stories and essays from the front lines of the radical mental health movement Overmedication, police brutality, electroconvulsive therapy, involuntary hospitalization, traumas that lead to intense altered states and suicidal thoughts: these are the struggles of those labeled “mentally ill.” While much has been written about the systemic problems of our mental-health care system, this book gives voice to those with personal experience of psychiatric miscare often excluded from the discussion, like people of color and LGBTQ+ communities. It is dedicated to finding working alternatives to the “Mental Health Industrial Complex” and shifting the conversation from mental illness to mental health.