"Dr. Paris has written an honest, balanced presentation of the ways in
which psychiatric drugs are evaluated and prescribed. He highlights
the complexity of the task, the limits of what is known and the mixed
picture that research often produces. His conclusions are refreshing
because they are built from an even-handed, pragmatic assessment of
the empirical evidence. The result is a stimulating look at the world
of treatments for emotional disorders that acknowledges the usefulness
of both biological and psychosocial explanations where appropriate.
His recommendations provide helpful roadmaps for patients,
practitioners and researchers alike. The book is sure to serve as a
welcome catalyst for the continuing debates about which treatments are
likely to produce the best outcomes." —Roger P. Greenberg, Ph.D.
Distinguished Professor and Head, Psychology Division Dept. of
Psychiatry & Behavioral Science SUNY Upstate Medical University, NY,
USA The message of this book is that psychiatrists have some very good
drugs, but can expect bad results when they are over-used, prescribed
outside of evidence-based indications, or given to the wrong patients.
While acknowledging that many current agents are highly effective and
have revolutionized the treatment of certain disorders, Joel Paris
criticizes their use outside of an evidence base. Too many patients
are either over-medicated or are misdiagnosed to justify aggressive
treatment. Dr. Paris calls for more government funding of clinical
trials to establish, without bias, the effectiveness of these agents.
He has written this book for practitioners and trainees to show that
scientific evidence supports a more cautious and conservative approach
to drug therapy. After describing the history of psychopharmacology,
including its early successes, Dr. Paris reviews the relationship
between psychiatry and the pharmaceutical industry. This problem has
received considerable popular attention in recent years and Dr. Paris
documents initiatives to increase transparency and decrease the
influence of pharmaceutical marketing on diagnosis and prescribing
habits. Dr Paris then examines some major controversies. One is the
fact that newer drugs have not been shown to be superior to older
agents. Another is that while the number of prescriptions for
antidepressants has increased dramatically, meta-analyses show that
their value is more limited than previously believed. Still another is
the widespread prescription of mood stabilizers and antipsychotic
drugs for patients, including children and adolescents, who do not
have bipolar illness. Polypharmacy is an especially contentious area:
very few drug combinations have been tested in clinical trials, yet
many patients end up on a cocktail of powerful drugs, each with its
own side effects. Dr Paris briefly considers alternatives to
pharmacology and again calls for more clinical trials of these
approaches. He also discusses the current trend to medicalizing what
many would describe as normal distress and states succinctly: Some
things in life are worth being upset about.
Les mer
An Evidence-Based Critique
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781119994022
Publisert
2018
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Wiley Professional, Reference & Trade (Wiley K&L)
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter