Concise Guide to Cross-Cultural Psychiatry (Concise Guides) - Softcover

Gaw, Albert C., M.D.

 
9780880489072: Concise Guide to Cross-Cultural Psychiatry (Concise Guides)

Inhaltsangabe

As society becomes more diverse and the world evolves into a global village, the need to integrate culture into medicine and psychiatry has become increasingly critical--challenging clinicians to provide the most effective psychiatric care to patients of different racial and ethnic backgrounds.

Breaking new ground by proposing the use of a new instrument for assessing nonadherence to psychotropic medication regimens in clinical practice, the author begins with an overview of culture in psychiatry, which adopts Ward Goodenough's definition of culture as a clinically useful concept. Subsequent chapters cover

    • The culture influences of psychiatric care of Native Americans, which uses a fascinating case study to propose that ethnicity--as distinct from culture--be used as a central organizing principle to integrate cultural factors in psychiatric care. • Culture in DSM-IV, which summarizes the specific cultural contribution in each section of the diagnostic categories of DSM-IV and discusses the significance of the cultural statement for the introduction to the manual and the cultural annotations for the multiaxial schema.• Culture-bound syndromes (CBSs), which clarifies the hot issues on how to define and classify CBSs, suggests a decision tree to help clinicians differentiate CBSs from other DSM-IV categories of mental illnesses, and proposes a tentative classification of CBSs that can be integrated into DSM-IV.• Cultural formulation (CF), which ventures beyond the application of CF as proposed by the cultural task groups of DSM-IV by using a clinical case study to highlight the technique of elucidating cultural information during a routine psychiatric interview.• Cross-cultural psychopharmacology, which reviews the contribution of pharmacokinetic, pharmacogenetic, and pharmacodynamic factors to the variations of psychotropic drug responses in different populations, and the cultural context of nonadherence to psychotropic medication regimens, which proposes using a new instrument called the Clinician's Inquiry Into the Meaning of Taking Psychotropic Medications (developed by the author and John A. Nichols, Psy.D.), for assessing nonadherence in clinical practice.• The cultural context of psychotherapy, which explores various psychotherapeutic issues when a therapist from one culture is called upon to treat a patient from another culture.

Designed to fit into a lab-coat or jacket pocket, these convenient guides complement the more detailed information found in lengthier psychiatric texts. Packed with practical information and enhanced by illustrations, references, and a glossary, this Concise Guide will appeal to psychiatrists, psychiatric residents, and medical students working in treatment settings such as inpatient psychiatry units, outpatient clinics, consultation--liaison services, and private offices.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Albert C. Gaw, M.D., is a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the University of California in San Francisco, California. Dr. Gaw also serves as the Medical Director for Long Term Care at the Community Mental Health Services of the Department of Public Health for the City and County of San Francisco. He further works as the Medical Director of the San Francisco Mental Health Rehabilitation Facility of San Francisco General Hospital for the Community Health Network of San Francisco of the Department of Public Health for the City and County of San Francisco.

Aus dem Klappentext

As society becomes more diverse and the world evolves into a global village, the need to integrate culture into medicine and psychiatry has become increasingly critical--challenging clinicians to provide the most effective psychiatric care to patients of different racial and ethnic backgrounds.

The author of this groundbreaking guide presents an overview of culture in psychiatry using fascinating case studies to propose that ethnicity be used as a central organizing principle to integrate cultural factors in psychiatric care. This book summarizes the specific cultural contribution in each section of the diagnostic categories of DSM-IV and clarifies today's hot issues on how to define and classify culture-bound syndromes. It highlights the technique of elucidating cultural information during a routine psychiatric interview and details cross-cultural psychopharmacology. It also focuses on the sociocultural factors that affect psychopharmacology and the issue of nonadherence and explores the cultural context of psychotherapy.

Designed to fit into a lab-coat or jacket pocket, these convenient guides complement the more detailed information found in lengthier psychiatric texts. Packed with practical information and enhanced with illustrations, references, and a glossary, this Concise Guide will appeal to psychiatrists, psychiatric residents, and medical students working in treatment settings such as inpatient psychiatry units, outpatient clinics, consultation--liaison services, and private offices.

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