Senin, 16 Maret 2020

[PDF] Download Emergency Psychiatry: Principles and Practice by Rachel Lipson Glick MD,Scott L. Zeller MD,Jon S. Berlin MD | Free EBOOK PDF English

Book Details

Title: Emergency Psychiatry: Principles and Practice
Author: Rachel Lipson Glick MD,Scott L. Zeller MD,Jon S. Berlin MD
Number of pages:
Publisher: LWW; Second edition (January 7, 2020)
Language: English
ISBN: 1975113683
Rating: 4,1     4 reviews

Book Description

The field of emergency psychiatry is complex and varied, encompassing elements of general medicine, emergency medicine, trauma, acute care, the legal system, politics and bureaucracy, mental illness, substance abuse and addiction, current social issues, and more. In one comprehensive, highly regarded volume, Emergency Psychiatry: Principles and Practice brings together key principles from psychiatric subspecialties as well as from emergency medicine, psychology, law, medical ethics, and public health policy. Leading emergency psychiatrists write from their extensive clinical experience, providing evidence-based information, expert opinions, American Psychiatric Association guidelines, and case studies throughout the text. This fully up-to-date second edition covers all of the important issues facing psychiatry residents and practitioners working in today’s emergency settings, or who encounter psychiatric emergencies in other medical settings.   Provides complete, invaluable information on every aspect of today’s emergency psychiatry, including the areas of community, consultation/liaison, psychotherapy, substance abuse, psychopharmacology, disasters, children, geriatrics, administration, forensics, and much more.Reflects significant recent advances and changes in perspectives regarding crisis and emergency mental health care.Features a newly reorganized format covering Models and Standards of Patient Care, Research, and Education; General Principles of Care; Staffing and Support; Common Presenting Problems; Special Populations; and Policy and Special Topics.Includes new chapters on psychiatric boarding, staffing models, and inclusion of the family in crisis care, as well as additional special population chapters on college students, transgender individuals, prisoners, and immigrants and refugees.Covers specific approaches to common problems, such as alignment of the approach to agitation with Project BETA recommendations, and includes evidence-based management and treatment throughout.Discusses special topics such as legal issues that emergency mental health providers must be aware of, emergency telepsychiatry, best practices for working with police and law enforcement, crisis phone services, and disaster psychiatry.Enrich Your Ebook Reading ExperienceRead directly on your preferred device(s),such as computer, tablet, or smartphone.Easily convert to audiobook,powering your content with natural language text-to-speech. 

Customers Review:

In general, a very good basic discussion of the aspects of running a Psychiatric Emergency Service.Two minor issues:1. Psychopathy – lack of remorse in personality- is not discussed at all as to diagnostics nor treatment,2. Psychopharmacology – few choices discussed for all sorts of DSM categories, didn’t see lithium or thorazine mentioned.
Very informative and easy to read book
This book is an excellent, comprehensive reference for professionals working with acute psychiatric patients. The book is well written, easy to understand, and effectively covers all the important issues facing emergency psychiatric professionals. This book would be what I would choose if I had to select one book to have at my side when working with psychiatric emergencies.
This work states the erroneous belief that diseases like fibromyalgia and ME (CFS) are ‘functional syndromes’ and that they overlap to some extent with somatoform disorders. There are, for example, over 4,000 articles in peer reviewed medical journals showing frank biological pathology in ME. ME and fibromyalgia cause an enormous amount of morbidity and suffering. The propagation of falsehoods like these contribute to a huge amount of iatrogenic morbidity and mortality for people with ME and fibromyalgia.