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Textbook of Community Psychiatry (2nd Ed., 2nd ed. 2022) American Association for Community Psychiatry

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Sowers Wesley E., McQuistion Hunter L., Ranz Jules M., Feldman Jacqueline Maus, Runnels Patrick S.

Couverture de l’ouvrage Textbook of Community Psychiatry

The second edition of the AACP's (American Association for Community Psychiatry) Textbook of Community Psychiatry is a welcome update of this notable work that comprehensively presents the state of the art in this field. Along with continuously evolving scientific advances and principles of clinical care, community psychiatry must respond to shifts in public policy as well as economic climate. The past decade has witnessed significant political and social changes, including climate change, immigration levels, technological advancement, the influence of social media and the rise of political unrest. This new edition reflects these wider changes, incorporating new chapters and enhancing previous ones. It remains the standard text for certification of those working in healthcare and social welfare systems design and delivery of services.  

 

Readers will gain knowledge of:

  • Basic pillars of the field
  • Evidence based interventions
  • Telepsychiatry and technological aids
  • Trauma informed services
  • Integrated health systems
  • Social determinants of health
  • Structural discrimination





Part I Introduction and Background

1. Introduction: Community Psychiatry on the Move

2. History of Community Psychiatry

Part II The Basics: The Pillars of Community Psychiatry

3. Recovery and Person-Centered Care: Empowerment,Collaboration, and Integration

4. Population Health, Prevention, and Community Psychiatry.- Exercising Effective Leadership

5. Advocacy in Evolution: The Push and Pull of Psychiatrists

6. Comprehensive Integrated Systems of Care

Part III Core Competencies for Community Psychiatrists

7. Inspiring a Welcoming, Hopeful Culture

8. Motivational Interviewing as a Core Communication Style

9. Person-Centered Recovery Planning as a Roadmap to Recovery

10. Cultural and Linguistic Competence

11. Context-Specific Assessment

12. Team Leadership: Promoting Diversity and Inclusion in the Aftermath of COVID-19

13. Community Education

14. Collaborative Medication Management and Discontinuation

15. Traumatic Stress in the Community: Identification and Intervention

16. Integrated Care and Community Psychiatry

17. Group Appointments in Psychiatry+

18. Treatment Techniques for Co-occurring Substance

19. Use and Mental Disorders

20. Women’s Mental Health: Core Concepts for Community Psychiatry

Part IV Effective and Established Interventions

21. Developing, Evaluating and Implementing Evidence-Based Interventions in Real World Practice

22. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

23. Psychiatric Rehabilitation

24. Family Systems Care in Public Sector Settings

25. Evidence-Based Practices for Co-occurring Addiction and Mental Illness

26. Case Management and Assertive Community Treatment

27. Crisis and Emergency Services

Part V Creating Healthy Communities

28. Epidemiology in Community Psychiatry

29. Social and Political Determinants of Health and Mental Health

30. Mental Health Services Research and Community Psychiatry

31. Climate Change: Implications for Community Mental Health

32. Disaster Victims and the Response to Trauma

33. The Role of the Psychiatrist in Community Consultation and Collaboration

34. Collaborative Reduction of Criminal Justice Involvement for Persons with Mental Illness

Part VI Supportive Services for Community Living

35. Housing First and the Role of Psychiatry in Supported Housing

36. Health Self-Management: The Emerging Importance of Trauma and Resilience

37. Supported Employment.- Peer Service Providers as Colleagues

38. Fountain House and the Clubhouse Movement

40. Service Coordination and Health Homes

Part VII Special Populations

41. Community-Based Psychiatric Care for Individuals with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities

42. Psychiatric Care for People Experiencing Homelessness

43. Early Psychosis and the Prevention and Mitigation of Serious Mental Illness

44. Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Psychosis

45. Veterans’ Services

46. Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Services

47. Serving Elders in the Public Sector

48. Rural Populations

49. Clinical Issues and Programming for Sexual and Gender Minority Populations

50. Migrant and Refugee Mental Health

Part VIII Development and Administration of Services

51. Transforming Mental Health Systems and Programs

52. Program Evaluation

53. Creating Value: Resource and Quality Management

54. Telehealth and Technology

55. The Medical Director in Community-Based Mental Healthcare

56. Financing of Community Behavioral Health Services

57. Workforce Development in Community Psychiatry

58. Practical Ethics for Practicing Clinicians

Part IX Shaping the Future

59. Medical Student and Resident Education in Community Psychiatry

60. Public/Community Psychiatry Fellowships

61. Mentoring and Supervision in Community Psychiatry

62. International Trends in Community Mental Health Services

63. Community Psychiatry: Past, Present, and Future.

Wesley E. Sowers, MD is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and is the Director of the Center for Public Service Psychiatry and its associated Fellowship Program at Western Psychiatric Hospital. He is board certified in Adult Psychiatry with subspecialty certifications in Addiction, Administrative and Community Psychiatry. He is a Past President of the American Association for Community Psychiatry and has served on the Board of Directors of that organization since 1988. He has also been on the Board of the American Association of Psychiatric Administrators since 1999. He has served as Co-Chair of the Mental Health Services Committee of the Group for Advancement of Psychiatry since 2009. From 2008 to 2016 he was co-director of the SAMHSA sponsored Recovery to Practice curriculum development project for psychiatry.

 Dr. Sowers is a graduate of Brown University and Northwestern University Medical School. He completed residencies at the Cook County Hospital in Chicago and the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry in New York City. Clinically, he has extensive experience in the provision of treatment and services to special populations such as homeless men and women, people with criminal records, LGBTQ individuals, and people with substance use disorders. He has published several articles, editorials, and book chapters on topics related to his clinical activities and health care systems management. He was the chief architect of the Level of Care Utilization System (LOCUS) and its counterpart for children and adolescents (CALOCUS), instruments widely used to guide service intensity decisions.

Hunter L. McQuistion, MD is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at New York University (NYU) Grossman School of Medicine and Senior Attending Psychiatrist at NYU Langone Health. He is Medical Director of the SAMHSA-funded Engagement, Treatment, and Recovery (EnTRy) Program at Family H

Comprehensive and up to the minute

Covers basic pillars of the field and evidence-based interventions

New information on telepsychiatry, special populations, and integrated systems of care

Date de parution :

Ouvrage de 916 p.

17.8x25.4 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 15 jours).

Prix indicatif 210,99 €

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Date de parution :

Ouvrage de 916 p.

17.8x25.4 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 15 jours).

Prix indicatif 295,39 €

Ajouter au panier