"This third edition book is a broad introductory textbook, with accompanying eBook resources. It gives an overview of the fundamentals critical for mastery for psychiatric residents. From foundational topics of patient interaction and common diagnoses to the implications of unique populations and treatment settings, the book provides an excellent guide for mastery of the psychiatric clinical fundamentals. This new edition justifies replacing the last one, published in 2015." ©Doody’s Review Service, 2024, Daniel M Tuinstra, MD (Holland Hospital), Doody’s Score: 97 - 5 Stars!

The Massachusetts General Hospital is widely regarded as one of the world's premier psychiatric institutions. Massachusetts General Hospital Comprehensive Clinical Psychiatry, 3rd Edition, offers practical, informative, and hands-on advice from the staff of the esteemed MGH Department of Psychiatry, helping you put today’s best practices to work for your patients. This authoritative reference covers a wide variety of clinical syndromes and settings, aided by superb graphics throughout. In one convenient volume, you’ll have easy access to the answers you need to face and overcome any clinical challenge. Uses a reader-friendly and highly templated format with abundant boxed summaries, bulleted points, case histories, algorithms, references, and suggested readings. Contains new chapters on the Psychiatric Management of Patients with Cardiac, Renal, Pulmonary, and Gastrointestinal Disease; COVID-19 Infection; Burns, Trauma, and Intensive Care Unit Treatment; Care of LGBTQ Patients; and Mindfulness and Resilience. Covers key areas, such as Substance Use Disorders; Mood, Anxiety, and Psychotic Disorders; Emergency Psychiatry; Functional Neuroanatomy and the Neurologic Examination; Psychological and Neuropsychological Assessment; Military Psychiatry; Psychiatric Manifestations of Traumatic Brain Injury; Legal and Ethical Issues in Psychiatry; End of Life Care; and Approaches to Collaborative Care and Primary Care Psychiatry. Features key points for every chapter, updated DSM-5 criteria, and enhanced content on collaborative care and behavioral medicine, ensuring that your knowledge is thorough and up to date. Corresponds to the companion review volume, Massachusetts General Hospital Study Guide for Psychiatry Exams, 2nd Edition (ISBN: 978-0-443-11983-5). An eBook version is included with purchase. The eBook allows you to access all of the text, figures, and references, with the ability to search, customize your content, make notes and highlights, and have content read aloud. Any additional digital ancillary content may publish up to 6 weeks following the publication date.
Les mer
1. The Doctor-Patient Relationship 2. The Psychiatric Interview 3. Laboratory Tests and Diagnostic Procedures 4. Treatment Adherence 5. Child, Adolescent, and Adult Development 6. Diagnostic Rating Scales and Psychiatric Instruments 7. Understanding and Applying Psychological Assessment 8. Neuropsychological Assessment 9. Coping with Medical Illness and Psychotherapy of the Medically Ill Patients 10. An Overview of the Psychotherapies 11. Brief Psychotherapy: An Overview 12. Couples Therapy 13. Family Therapy 14. Group Psychotherapy 15. Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy, Behavioral Therapy, and Cognitive Therapy 16. Delirium 17. Neurocognitive Disorders and Dementia 18. Intellectual Disability 19. The DSM-5 and DSM-5 Text Revision: A System for Psychiatric Diagnosis 20. Psychiatric Neuroscience: Incorporating Pathophysiology into Clinical Case Formulation 21. Mental Disorders Due to Another Medical Condition 22. Sleep Disorders 23. Disruptive, Impulse, Control, and Conduct Disorders 24. Somatic Symptom Disorders 25. Factitious Disorders and Malingering 26. Substance Use Disorders 27. Psychosis and Schizophrenia 28. Depressive Disorders 29. Bipolar Disorder 30. Psychiatric Illness During Pregnancy and the Post-partum Period 31. Anxiety Disorders and Post-traumatic Stress Disorder 32. Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders 33. Dissociative Disorders 34. Sexual Disorders and Sexual Dysfunction 35. Eating Disorders: Evaluation and Management 36. Grief, Bereavement, and Adjustment Disorders 37. Personality and Personality Disorders 38. Catatonia, Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome, and Serotonin Syndrome 39. Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Disorders 40. Psychiatric Management of Patients with Cardiac Disease 41. Psychiatric Management of Patients with Renal Disease 42. Psychiatric Management of Patients with Gastrointestinal Disease 43. Pre-transplant Assessment and Post-transplant Management 44. HIV Infection and AIDS 45. COVID-19 Infection 46. Psychiatric Co-morbidities and Complications of Cancer and Cancer Treatment 47. Psychiatric Care of Patients with Pulmonary Disease 48. Burns, Trauma, and Intensive Care Unit Treatment 49. The Pharmacotherapy of Anxiety Disorders 50. Antipsychotic Drugs 51. Pharmacological Approaches to Depression and Treatment-Resistant Depression 52. Device Neuromodulation and Brain Stimulation Therapies 53. Lithium and Its Role in Psychiatry 54. The Use of Antiepileptic Drugs in Psychiatry 55. Pharmacotherapy of Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder Across the Life Span 56. Drug-Drug Interactions in Psychopharmacology 57. Side Effects of Psychotropic Medications 58. Natural Medications in Psychiatry 59. The Suicidal Patient 60. Law and Psychiatry 61. Intimate Partner Violence 62. Psychiatric Correlates and Consequences of Abuse and Neglect 63. Patients with Genetic Syndromes 64. Serious Mental Illness 65. Community Psychiatry 66. Culture and Psychiatry 67. Psychiatric Epidemiology 68. Collaborative Care and Primary Care Psychiatry 69. Geriatric Psychiatry 70. Care at the End of Life: Psychiatric and Ethical Aspects 71. Care of LGBTQIA+ Patients 72. Obesity and Its Management 73. Neuroanatomical Systems Relevant to Neuropsychiatric Disorders 74. The Neurological Examination 75. Neuropsychiatric Principles and Differential Diagnosis 76. Neuroimaging in Psychiatry 77. Clinical Neurophysiology and Electroencephalography 78. Epilepsy and Its Psychiatric Manifestations 79. Differential Diagnosis and Treatment of Headaches 80. Pathophysiology, Psychiatric Co-morbidity, and Treatment of Pain 81. Psychiatric Aspects of Stroke Syndromes 82. Psychiatric Manifestations of Traumatic Brain Disorder 83. Emergency in Psychiatry 84. Military Psychiatry 85. Disaster Psychiatry 86. Global Psychiatry and Mental Health in the Post-pandemic world 87. The Interface of Climate and Psychiatry 88. Sport Psychiatry 89. School Collaboration and Consultation 90. Coping with the Rigors of Psychiatric Practice 91. Mindfulness and Resilience
Les mer
The information you need about psychiatric care from the hospital you trust

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780443118449
Publisert
2024-07-26
Utgave
3. utgave
Utgiver
Elsevier Health Sciences
Vekt
3210 gr
Høyde
276 mm
Bredde
216 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
1056

Biografisk notat

Dr. Theodore A. Stern is the Ned H. Cassem Professor of Psychiatry in the field of Psychosomatic Medicine/Consultation at Harvard Medical School (HMS), Chief Emeritus of The Avery D. Weisman, Psychiatry Consultation Service, and Director of the Thomas P. Hackett Center for Scholarship in Psychosomatic Medicine at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). Dr. Stern has co-authored more than 550 peer-reviewed journal articles and book chapters, and he has edited or authored more than 60 books (including the MGH Handbook of General Hospital Psychiatry, the MGH Psychiatry Update and Board Preparation, Learning About Psychopharmacology, Facing Overweight and Obesity, Facing Pelvic Pain, Facing Memory Loss and Dementia, Facing Serious Mental Illness, and the MGH Study Guide for Psychiatry Exams). Dr. Stern is a Past-President of the Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry (ACLP) and is the Editor-in-Chief Emeritus of its journal, Psychosomatics (now called Journal of the Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry). He has won the coveted "Best Teacher Award” from the graduating residents at the MGH/McLean Hospital Psychiatric Residency Training Program, the Cynthia N. Kettyle Teaching Award from the HMS Department of Psychiatry, the MGH Department of Psychiatry's Award for Exceptional Mentorship in the Clinical Realm, a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society of Liaison Psychiatry, and the Thomas P. Hackett Award from the ACLP (its highest honor). Dr. Timothy Wilens is Chief of the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and is Co-director of the Center for Addiction Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). He is the MGH Trustees Chair in Addiction Medicine and Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School (HMS). Dr. Wilens earned his MD at the University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor and completed his residency in child, adolescent, and adult psychiatry at the MGH. Dr. Wilens' research interests include the relationship among attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), bipolar disorder, and substance use disorders; embedded health care models; and the pharmacotherapy of ADHD across the lifespan. He has published more than 350 peer-reviewed articles concerning these and related topics. He has also co-edited more than 90 book chapters, 5 books, and 350 abstracts and presentations for national and international scientific meetings. Dr. Wilens is a distinguished fellow of the American Psychiatric Association and the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and serves on the board or as a scientific reviewer for more than 35 journals. Dr. Maurizio Fava is Chair of the Department of Psychiatry at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH). Dr. Fava obtained his MD from University of Padova School of Medicine (residency in endocrinology); he completed residency training in psychiatry at the MGH. He founded and was director of the hospital's Depression Clinical and Research Program (DCRP) from 1990 to 2014. In 2007, he founded and is now Executive Director of the MGH Clinical Trials Network and Institute (CTNI), the first academic CRO specialized in planning and coordination of multi-center clinical trials in psychiatry. Under Dr. Fava's direction, the DCRP became one of the most highly regarded depression programs in the country, a model for academic programs that link, in a bi-directional fashion, clinical and research work. His prominence in the field is reflected in his role as the co-principal investigator of STAR*D, the largest research study ever conducted in the area of depression, and of the RAPID Network, the NIMH-funded series of studies of novel, rapidly acting antidepressant therapies. Dr. Fava is a world leader in the field of depression. He has authored or co-authored more than 900 original articles published in medical journals with international circulation, edited eight books, and has been successful in obtaining funding as principal or co-principal investigator from both the National Institutes of Health and other sources for a total of more than $150 million.