Produktbild: Values and Psychiatric Diagnosis

Values and Psychiatric Diagnosis

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

28.10.2004

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

568

Maße (L/B/H)

23.4/15.6/3 cm

Gewicht

852 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-852637-7

Beschreibung

Rezension

As one who has little formal training in philosophy, but who has been practicing philosophy without a license (as do, surely, many respected colleagues who resort to the DSM codes primarily for reimbursement), I celebrate the birth of this book and wish it well. People in the field are all amateur philosophers, and they can use some professional help. The book would serve for a semester course in the last year of college and in graduate school. Every psychiatric residency and clinical psychology program should devote at least an annual grand rounds or case conference to this work. It should be required reading for anyone who has anything to do with the current use and the future development of the DSM. PsycCRITIQUES, Vol 50, No 15

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

28.10.2004

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

568

Maße (L/B/H)

23.4/15.6/3 cm

Gewicht

852 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-852637-7

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  • Produktbild: Values and Psychiatric Diagnosis
    • Part 1: Introduction

    • 1.1: Background

    • 1.2: Why psychiatric diagnosis and classification?

    • 1.3: A brief personal history of nosological controversy

    • 1.4: Defining 'values'

    • 1.5: Overview of the book

    • Part 2: Methods

    • 2.1: Background

    • 2.2: Kuhn on scientific theory change

    • 2.3: Values, value terms and value semantics

    • 2.4: Five heuristic types of values

    • 2.5: Unravelling the dense fabric of values

    • Part 3: Science

    • 3.1: Background - relations between medicine and science

    • 3.2: Basics of classification

    • 3.3: Science and psychiatric nosology

    • Part 4: Patients, professions and guild

    • 4.1: Background

    • 4.2: Patients

    • 4.3: Professions

    • 4.4: Guild interests and classification

    • 4.5: Potential professional conflicts of interest in the DSMs

    • 4.6: Weighing patient, professional and guild interests in the DSMs

    • Part 5: Space, time and being

    • 5.1: Background

    • 5.2: Defining mental disorder

    • 5.3: World views, assumptions and ontological values

    • 5.4: The constraint of ontological space - the transpersonal psychiatry critique

    • 5.5: The constraint of ontological time - the developmentalist critique

    • 5.6: Space and time recast - existential-phenomenological and social constructionist critiques

    • 5.7: Three contrast cases for ontological values in psychiatry

    • Part 6: Sex and gender

    • 6.1: Background: the declassification of homosexuality

    • 6.2: "Mad" vs "bad" in the bedroom

    • 6.3: Mental disorder diagnosis and women: what are the issues?

    • 6.4: Discrimination and stigma as negative value- consequences

    • 6.5: Gender concepts as entailed ontological values

    • 6.6: Medicalization and eudaimonia

    • Part 7: Culture

    • 7.1: The cultural challenge to mental disorder classification

    • 7.2: DSM-IV approaches to the problem of culture

    • 7.3: Ten weird things about Western psychiatry

    • 7.4: Relativism, absolutism, and cross-cultural DSMs

    • 7.5: Toward an ethics of cross-cultural psychiatric diagnosis

    • Part 8: Genetic nosology

    • 8.1: Background

    • 8.2: Barest essentials of psychiatric genetics

    • 8.3: Psychiatric genetic nosology

    • 8.4: Value-structure of genetic vs clinical nosology

    • 8.5: Implications of a rising psychiatric genetic nosology

    • Part 9: Technology

    • 9.1: Background: Heidegger, Dreyfus and technology

    • 9.2: Insights from the philosophy of technology

    • 9.3: Psychiatric classification as technological

    • 9.4: Poietic vs technological diagnostic practice

    • 9.5: Toward a balanced poietic-technological practice

    • Part 10: Politics

    • 10.1: Political meanings

    • 10.2: "The politics-science dichotomy syndrome"

    • 10.3: Externalist political landscapes and classification

    • 10.4: Toward a political architecture for DSM-IV

    • 10.5: Good politics for science and classification

    • Part 11: Values and psychiatric diagnosis

    • 11.1: What is diagnosis?

    • 11.2: A gardener's allegory and the point of mental disorder classification

    • 11.3: Grasping the whole of values in classification

    • 11.4: Just how did values guide action in the DSM-IV?

    • 11.5: Just how should values guide action in future DSMs?