SOCIOCULTURAL ISSUES IN PSYCHIATRY. A CASEBOOK AND CURRICULUM

SOCIOCULTURAL ISSUES IN PSYCHIATRY. A CASEBOOK AND CURRICULUM

Editorial:
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Año de edición:
Materia
Psiquiatría
ISBN:
978-0-19-084998-6
Páginas:
296
N. de edición:
1
Idioma:
Inglés
Disponibilidad:
Disponible en 2-3 semanas

Descuento:

-5%

Antes:

59,00 €

Despues:

56,05 €

1. Introduction to Sociocultural Psychiatry
2. Culture as a Multidimensional Construct
3. Culture in the DSM-5
4. Global Psychiatric Epidemiology
5. Social Determinants of Psychiatric Illness
6. Psychiatry and Its Checkered Past: Perspectives on Current Practice
7. Minority Stress Theory and Internalized Prejudice: Links to Clinical Psychiatric Practice
8. Identifying and Working with Diverse Explanatory Models of Mental illness
9. Religion and Spirituality in Psychiatric Care: An Experiential Seminar Model Addressing Barriers to Discussing Religion and Spirituality
10. Gender and Sexuality: Shame and Safety in the Psychiatric Encounter
11. Implicit Bias in Mental Health Care
12. Responding to Patients' Provider Preferences
13. Navigating Cultural Challenges in Patient-Clinician Dyads
14. Teaching Sociocultural Psychiatry Throughout the Lifespan

As the demographics shift within the US population, the importance of culture on mental health diagnosis and treatment has become critical for education and clinical training in psychiatry. While it's impossible to gain an in-depth understanding of every culture, clinicians need to have the skills and knowledge required to provide culturally respectful care for an increasingly diverse clinical population. By explaining fundamental concepts in cultural psychiatry using a case-based format, clinicians and educators in the mental health fields will be able to reduce cultural clashes and unproductive clinical encounters. Although similar books have focused on providing guidelines for working with discrete populations (e.g., African Americans, Asian Americans, LGBTQ), the purpose of Sociocultural Issues in Psychiatry is to enhance clinicians' knowledge and skills by translating theory into practice across diverse patient populations and clinical contexts. Mental health clinicians at all levels, trainees, or practitioners, will benefit from the content and education provided in this book.

Features
• Focuses on the theoretical underpinnings of cultural psychiatry and developing in clinicians the ability to translate theory into practice across contexts and populations
• Features case studies with diverse populations that apply to clinical scenarios
• Provides guidance on how to develop continuing education curricula

Authors
• Nhi-Ha Trinh, MD, MPH, serves as the Director for the MGH Department of Psychiatry Center for Diversity as well as the Director of Multicultural Studies and the Director of Clinical Services at the MGH Depression Clinical and Research Program. As Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Associate Director, HMS Holmes Society, she is committed to medical student and psychiatry resident education and mentorship. Her academic work focuses on Sociocultural issues in psychiatry and she shares her passion for this topic as course Co-Director of the MGH/McLean Residency Sociocultural Curriculum.
Dr. Trinh earned her medical degree at the University of California, San Francisco, and her Master of Public Health at the University of California at Berkeley, specializing in Epidemiology. She completed residency training in Adult Psychiatry at the Mass General/McLean Adult Psychiatry Training Program and a fellowship in Geriatric Psychiatry at McLean Hospital.
• Justin A. Chen, MD, MPH, is Medical Director of Ambulatory Psychiatry and Co-Director of Primary Care Psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital. His interests include cross-cultural psychiatry, stigma, racial/ethnic disparities in mental health service utilization, and medical education. He has regularly chaired symposia related to these topics at annual meetings of the American Psychiatric Association and the Society for the Study of Psychiatry and Culture.