書誌事項

New Oxford textbook of psychiatry

edited by Michael G. Gelder, Nancy C. Andreasen, Juan J. López-Ibor Jr. and John R. Geddes

Oxford University Press, 2009

2nd ed

  • : set
  • v. 1
  • v. 2

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 30

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Includes bibliographical references and indexes

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The 'New Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry' is one of the leading reference works in this field. Bringing together over 200 chapters from the leading figures in the discipline, it presents a comprehensive account of clinical psychiatry, with reference to its scientific basis and to the patient's perspective throughout. In the 8 years since publication of the first edition, many new and exciting developments have occurred in the biological sciences, which are having a major impact on how we study and practise psychiatry. In addition, psychiatry has fostered closer ties with philosophy, and these are leading to healthy discussions about how we should diagnose and treat mental illness. This new edition recognises these and other developments. Throughout, accounts of clinical practice are linked to the underlying science, and to the evidence for the efficacy of treatments. Physical and psychological treatments, including psychodynamic approaches, are covered in depth. The history of psychiatry, ethics, public health aspects, and public attitudes to psychiatry and to patients are all given due attention.The 'New Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry' will continue to serve the profession as an authoritative and comprehensive reference.

目次

  • PART 1 - THE SUBJECT MATTER OF AND APPROACH TO PSYCHIATRY
  • 1.1 The patient's perspective
  • 1.2 Public attitudes and the challenge of stigma
  • 1.3.1 Mental disorders as a worldwide public health issue
  • 1.3.2 Transcultural psychiatry
  • 1.4 The history of psychiatry as a medical specialty
  • 1.5.1 Psychiatric ethics
  • 1.5.2 Values and values-based practice in clinical psychiatry
  • 1.6 The psychiatrist as manager
  • 1.7 Descriptive phenomenology
  • 1.8.1 The principles and clinical assessment in general psychiatry
  • 1.8.2 The assessment of personality
  • 1.8.3.1 Cognitive assessment
  • 1.8.3.2 Questionnaire, rating and behavioural methods of assessment
  • 1.9 Diagnosis and classification
  • 1.10 From science to practice
  • PART 2 - THE SCIENTIFIC BASIS OF PSYCHIATRIC AETIOLOGY
  • 2.1 Brain and Mind
  • 2.2 Statistics and the design of experiments and surveys
  • 2.3.1 Neuroanatomy
  • 2.3.2 Neurodevelopment
  • 2.3.3 Neuroendocrinology
  • 2.3.4 Neurotransmitters and signalling
  • 2.3.5 Neuropathology
  • 2.3.6 Functional positron emission tomography in psychiatry
  • 2.3.7 Structural magnetic resonance imaging
  • 2.3.8 Functional magnetic resonance imaging
  • 2.3.9 Neuronal networks, epilepsy and other brain dysfunctions
  • 2.3.10 Psychoneuroimmunology
  • 2.4.1 Quantitative genetics
  • 2.4.2 Molecular genetics
  • 2.5.1.1 Developmental psychology through infancy, childhood and adolescence
  • 2.5.2 Psychology of attention
  • 2.5.3 Psychology and biology of memory
  • 2.5.4 The anatomy of human emotion
  • 2.5.5 The neuropsychological basis of neuropsychiatry
  • 2.6.1 Medical sociology and issues of aetiology
  • 2.6.2 Social and cultural anthropology: salience for psychiatry
  • 2.7 The contribution of epidemiology to psychiatric aetiology
  • PART 3 - PSYCHODYNAMIC CONTRIBUTIONS TO PSYCHIATRY
  • 3.1 Psychoanalysis: Freud's theories and their contemporary development
  • 3.2 Object relations, attachment theory, self-psychology, and interpersonal psychoanalysis
  • 3.3 Current psychodynamic approaches to psychiatry
  • PART 4 - CLINICAL SYNDROMES OF ADULT PSYCHIATRY
  • 4.1.1 Delirium
  • 4.1.2 Dementia: Alzheimer's disease
  • 4.1.3 Fronto-temporal dementias
  • 4.1.4 Prion disease
  • 4.1.5 Dementia with Lewy bodies
  • 4.1.6 Dementia in Parkinson's disease
  • 4.1.7 Dementia due to Huntington's disease
  • 4.1.8 Vascular dementia
  • 4.1.9 Dementia due to HIV disease
  • 4.1.10 The neuropsychiatry of head injury
  • 4.1.11 Alcohol-related dementia
  • 4.1.12 Amnesic syndromes
  • 4.1.13 The management of dementia
  • 4.1.14 The remediation of memory disorders
  • 4.2.1 Pharmacological and psychological aspects of drug abuse
  • 4.2.2.1 Aetiology of alcohol problems
  • 4.2.2.2 Alcohol dependence and alcohol problems
  • 4.2.2.3 Alcohol and psychiatric and physical disorders
  • 4.2.2.4 Treatment of alcohol dependence
  • 4.2.2.5 Services for alcohol use disorders
  • 4.2.2.6 Prevention of alcohol-related problems
  • 4.2.3.1 Opiates: heroin, methadone, and buprenorphine
  • 4.2.3.2 Disorders relating to the use of amphetamines and cocaine
  • 4.2.3.3 Disorders relating to the use of phencyclidine and hallucinogens
  • 4.2.3.4 Misuse of benzodiazepines
  • 4.2.3.5 Disorders relating to the use of ecstasy, other 'party drugs' and khat
  • 4.2.3.6 Disorders relating to the use of volatile substances
  • 4.2.3.7 The mental health effects of cannabis use
  • 4.2.3.8 Nicotine dependence and treatment
  • 4.2.4 Assessing need and organizing services for drug misusers
  • 4.3.1 Schizophrenia: a conceptual history
  • 4.3.2.1 Descriptive clinical features of schizophrenia
  • 4.3.2.2 The clinical neuropsychology of schizophrenia
  • 4.3.3 Diagnosis, classification and differential diagnosis of schizophrenia
  • 4.3.4 Epidemiology of schizophrenia
  • 4.3.5.1 Genetic and environmental risk factors for schizophrenia
  • 4.3.5.2 The neurobiology of schizophrenia
  • 4.3.6 Course and outcome of schizophrenia and their prediction
  • 4.3.7 Treatment and management of schizophrenia
  • 4.3.8 Schizoaffective and schizotypal disorders
  • 4.3.9 Acute and transient psychotic disorders
  • 4.4 Persistent delusional symptoms and disorders
  • 4.5.1 Introduction to mood disorders
  • 4.5.2 Clinical features of mood disorders and mania
  • 4.5.3 Diagnosis, classification and differential diagnosis of mood disorders
  • 4.5.4 Epidemiology of mood disorders
  • 4.5.5.1 Genetic aetiology of mood disorders
  • 4.5.5.2 Neurobiological aetiology of mood disorders
  • 4.5.6 Course and prognosis of mood disorders
  • 4.5.7 Treatment of mood disorders
  • 4.5.8 Dysthymia, cyclothymia and hyperthymia
  • 4.6.1 Acute stress reactions
  • 4.6.2 Post-traumatic stress disorders
  • 4.6.3 Recovered memories and false memories
  • 4.6.4 Adjustment disorders
  • 4.6.5 Bereavement
  • 4.7.1 Generalized anxiety disorders
  • 4.7.2 Social anxiety disorder and specific phobias
  • 4.7.3 Panic disorders and agoraphobia
  • 4.8 Obsessive compulsive disorder
  • 4.9 Depersonalization disorder
  • 4.10.1 Anorexia nervosa
  • 4.10.2 Bulimia nervosa
  • 4.11.1 Normal sexual function
  • 4.11.2 The sexual dysfunctions
  • 4.11.3 The paraphilias
  • 4.11.4 Gender identity disorder in adults
  • 4.12.1 Personality disorders: an introductory perspective
  • 4.12.2 Classification and assessment of personality disorders
  • 4.12.3 Specific types of personality disorder
  • 4.12.4 Epidemiology of personality disorders
  • 4.12.5 Neuropsychological templates for abnormal personalities: from genes to biodevelopmental pathways
  • 4.12.6 Psychotherapy for personality disorders
  • 4.12.7 Management of personality disorder
  • 4.13.1 Impulse control disorders
  • 4.13.2 Special psychiatric problems relating to gambling
  • 4.14.1 Introduction to sleep-wake disorders
  • 4.14.2 Insomnias
  • 4.14.3 Excessive sleepiness
  • 4.14.4 Parasomnias
  • 4.15.1 Epidemiology and causes of suicide
  • 4.15.2 Deliberate self-harm: epidemiology and risk factors
  • 4.15.3 Biological aspects of suicidal behaviour
  • 4.15.4 Treatment of suicide attempters and prevention of suicide and attempted suicide
  • 4.16 Culture-related specific psychiatric syndromes
  • PART 5 - PSYCHIATRY AND MEDICINE
  • 5.1 Mind-body dualism, psychiatry and medicine
  • 5.2.1 Somatoform disorders and functional symptoms
  • 5.2.2 Epidemiology of somatoform disorders and other causes of unexplained medical symptoms
  • 5.2.3 Somatization disorder and related disorders
  • 5.2.4 Conversion and dissociation disorders
  • 5.2.5 Hypochondriasis
  • 5.2.6 Pain disorder
  • 5.2.7 Chronic fatigue syndrome
  • 5.2.8 Body dysmorphic disorder
  • 5.2.9 Factitious disorder and malingering
  • 5.2.10 Neurasthenia
  • 5.3.1 Adjustments to illness and handicap
  • 5.3.2 Psychiatric aspects of neurological disease
  • 5.3.3 Epilepsy
  • 5.3.4 Medical conditions associated with psychiatric disorder
  • 5.3.5 Psychiatric aspects of infections
  • 5.3.6 Psychiatric aspects of surgery (including transplantation)
  • 5.3.7 Psychiatric aspects of cancer
  • 5.3.8 Psychiatric aspects of accidents, burns and other trauma
  • 5.4 Obstetric and gynaecological conditions associated with psychiatric disorder
  • 5.5 Management of psychiatric disorders in medically ill patients
  • 5.6 Health psychology
  • 5.7 The organization of psychiatric services for general hospital departments
  • PART 6 - TREATMENT METHODS IN PSYCHIATRY
  • 6.1.1 The evaluation of physical treatments
  • 6.1.2 The evaluation of psychological treatment
  • 6.2.1 General principles of drug therapy in psychiatry
  • 6.2.2. Anxiolytics and hypnotics
  • 6.2.3 Antidepressants
  • 6.2.4 Lithium and related mood stabilizers
  • 6.2.5 Antipsychotic and anticholinergic drugs
  • 6.2.6 Antiepileptic drugs
  • 6.2.7 Drugs for cognitive disorders
  • 6.2.8 Drugs used in the treatment of addictions
  • 6.2.9 Complementary medicines
  • 6.2.10.1 Electroconvulsive therapy
  • 6.2.10.2 Phototherapy
  • 6.2.10.3 Transcranial magnetic stimulation
  • 6.2.11 Neurosurgery for psychiatric disorders
  • 6.3.1 Counselling
  • 6.3.2.1 Cognitive-behaviour therapy for anxiety disorders
  • 6.3.2.2 Cognitive-behaviour therapy for eating disorders
  • 6.3.2.3 Cognitive-behaviour therapy for depressive disorders
  • 6.3.2.4 Cognitive-behaviour therapy for schizophrenia
  • 6.3.3 Interpersonal psychotherapy for depression and other disorders
  • 6.3.4 Brief individual psychodynamic psychotherapy
  • 6.3.5 Psychoanalysis and other long-term dynamic psychotherapies
  • 6.3.6 Group methods in adult psychiatry
  • 6.3.7 Psychotherapy with couples
  • 6.3.8 Family therapy
  • 6.3.9 Therapeutic communities
  • 6.4.1 Rehabilitation techniques
  • 6.4.2 Psychiatric nursing techniques
  • 6.4.3 Social work approaches to mental health work: international trends
  • 6.4.4 Art therapy
  • 6.5 Indigenous folk healing practices
  • PART 7 - SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND SERVICE PROVISION
  • 7.1 Public policy and mental health
  • 7.2 Service needs of individuals and populations
  • 7.3 Cultural differences care pathways, service use, and outcome
  • 7.4 Primary prevention of mental disorders
  • 7.5 Planning and providing mental health services for a community
  • 7.6 Evaluation of mental health services
  • 7.7 Economic analysis of mental health services
  • 7.8 Psychiatry in primary care
  • 7.9 The role of the voluntary sector
  • 7.10.1 The special psychiatric problems of refugees
  • 7.10.2 Mental health services for homeless mentally ill people
  • 7.10.3 Mental health services for ethnic minorities
  • PART 8 - THE PSYCHIATRY OF OLD AGE
  • 8.1 The biology of ageing
  • 8.2 The sociology of normal ageing
  • 8.3 The ageing population and the epidemiology of mental disorders among the elderly
  • 8.4 Assessment of mental disorders in older patients
  • 8.5.1 Delirium in the elderly
  • 8.5.1.1 Mild cognitive impairment
  • 8.5.2 Substance use disorders in elderly people
  • 8.5.3 Schizophrenia and paranoid disorders of late life
  • 8.5.4 Mood disorders in the elderly
  • 8.5.5 Stress-related, anxiety, and obsessional disorders in elderly people
  • 8.5.6 Personality disorders in the elderly
  • 8.5.7 Suicide and deliberate self-harm in elderly people
  • 8.5.8 Sex in old age
  • 8.6 Special features of psychiatric treatment for the elderly
  • 8.7 The planning and organization of services for older adults
  • PART 9 - CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY
  • 9.1.1 Developmental psychopathology and classification in childhood and adolescence
  • 9.1.2 Epidemiology of psychiatric disorders in childhood and adolescence
  • 9.1.3 Assessment in child and adolescent psychiatry
  • 9.1.4 Prevention of mental disorder in childhood and other public health issues
  • 9.2.1 Developmental neuropsychiatric disorders
  • 9.2.2 Specific developmental disorders in childhood & adolescence
  • 9.2.3 Autism and the pervasive developmental disorders
  • 9.2.4 Attention deficit and hyperkinetic disorders in childhood and adolescence
  • 9.2.5 Conduct disorders in childhood and adolescence
  • 9.2.6 Anxiety disorders in childhood and adolescence
  • 9.2.7 Paediatric mood disorders
  • 9.2.8 Obsessive-compulsive disorder and tics in children and adolescents
  • 9.2.9 Sleep disorders in children and adolescents
  • 9.2.10 Suicide and attempted suicide in children and adolescents
  • 9.2.11 Children's speech and language difficulties
  • 9.2.12 Gender identity disorder in children and adolescents
  • 9.3.1 The influence of family, school and the environment
  • 9.3.2 Child trauma
  • 9.3.3 Child abuse and neglect
  • 9.3.4 The relationship between physical and mental health in children and adolescents
  • 9.3.5 The effects on child and adult mental health of adoption and foster care
  • 9.3.6 Effects of parental psychiatric and physical illness on child development
  • 9.3.7 The effects of bereavement in childhood
  • 9.4.1. The child as witness
  • 9.5.1 Counselling and psychotherapy for children
  • 9.5.2 Child psychoanalysis
  • 9.5.3 Cognitive behaviour therapies for children and adolescents
  • 9.5.4 Interventions for parents and families: a developmental psychopathology perspective
  • 9.5.5 Medication for children and adolescents
  • 9.5.6 Residential care for social reasons
  • 9.5.7 Organization of services for children and adolescents
  • 9.5.8 The treatment of child and adolescent psychiatric emergencies
  • 9.5.9 The child psychiatrist as consultant to schools and colleges
  • PART 10 - INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY
  • 10.1 Classification, diagnosis, psychiatric assessment and needs assessment
  • 10.2 Epidemiology of psychiatry of learning disability
  • 10.3 Aetiology of intellectual disability: general issues and prevention
  • 10.4 Syndromes causing intellectual disability
  • 10.5.1 Psychiatric and behaviour disorders among children and adolescents with intellectual disability
  • 10.5.2 Psychiatric and behaviour disorders among adult persons with intellectual disability
  • 10.5.3 Epilepsy and epilepsy-related behaviour disorders among people with intellectual disability
  • 10.6 Methods of treatment
  • 10.7 Special needs of adolescents and elderly people with intellectual disability
  • 10.8 Families with a member with intellectual disability and their needs
  • 10.9 The planning and provision of psychiatric services for adults with intellectual disability
  • PART 11 - FORENSIC PSYCHIATRY
  • 11.1 General principles of law relating to people with mental disorder
  • 11.2 Psychosocial causes of offending
  • 11.3.1 Associations between psychiatric disorder and offending
  • 11.3.2 Offending, substance misuse and mental disorder
  • 11.3.3 Cognitive disorders, epilepsy, ADHD and offending
  • 11.4.1 Mental disorders among offenders in correctional settings
  • 11.4.2 Homicide offenders including mass murder and infanticide
  • 11.4.3 Fraud, deception and thieves
  • 11.4.4 Juvenile delinquency and serious antisocial behaviour
  • 11.5.1 Child molesters and other sexual offenders
  • 11.5.2 Arson (fire-raising)
  • 11.5.3 Stalking
  • 11.5.4 Querulous behaviour: vexatious litigation, abnormally persistent complaining and petitioning
  • 11.5.5 Domestic violence
  • 11.6 The impact of victimization
  • 11.7 Assessing and managing the risks of violence towards others
  • 11.8 The expert witness in the criminal court: assessment, reports and testimony
  • 11.9 Managing offenders with psychiatric disorders in general psychiatric services
  • 11.10 Management of offenders with mental disorder in specialist forensic mental health services

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