Oxford Textbook of Community Mental Health
Herausgeber: Thornicroft, Graham; Szmukler, George; Mueser, Kim T; Gureje, Oye; Drake, Robert E
Oxford Textbook of Community Mental Health
Herausgeber: Thornicroft, Graham; Szmukler, George; Mueser, Kim T; Gureje, Oye; Drake, Robert E
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This second edition of the Oxford Textbook of Community Mental Health addresses recent changes and achievements, current controversies, and future challenges while emphasizing areas of convergence, where social values, health, medical sciences, and policy formation converge and meet.
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This second edition of the Oxford Textbook of Community Mental Health addresses recent changes and achievements, current controversies, and future challenges while emphasizing areas of convergence, where social values, health, medical sciences, and policy formation converge and meet.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- 2nd edition
- Seitenzahl: 512
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. April 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 276mm x 225mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 1486g
- ISBN-13: 9780198898818
- ISBN-10: 0198898819
- Artikelnr.: 73374270
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- 2nd edition
- Seitenzahl: 512
- Erscheinungstermin: 17. April 2025
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 276mm x 225mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 1486g
- ISBN-13: 9780198898818
- ISBN-10: 0198898819
- Artikelnr.: 73374270
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Graham Thornicroft is Professor of Community Psychiatry at King's College London. He is also a Consultant Psychiatrist at the South London & Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, working in a community mental health team with people in a first episode of psychosis. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences, a National Institute of Health Research Senior Investigator Emeritus, and Honorary Fellow of King's College London and the Royal College of Psychiatrists. Graham has made significant contributions to the fields of community mental health, global mental health, and reducing stigma and discrimination. Bob Drake is Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons and a Vice President at the Westat Corporation. He is an active clinician and has studied psychiatric rehabilitation for over 50 years. Along with Deborah Becker, he developed the Individual Placement and Support (IPS) model of supported employment, the IPS Employment Center, and the International IPS Learning Community. He has published more than 700 articles and books on psychiatric rehabilitation. Oye Gureje is Professor and Director, WHO Collaborating Centre for Research and Training in Mental Health, Neuroscience and Substance Abuse, University of Ibadan, Nigeria. He is Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Science, Fellow of the Nigerian Academy of Medicine and a laureate of the Nigerian National Order of Merit. He is known internationally for his work on psychiatric epidemiology, ageing, psychiatric nosology and global mental health. Kim T. Mueser, Ph.D. was the Executive Director of the Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation at Boston University from 2011 to 2016, where he still works. Dr. Mueser has served on the editorial boards of numerous peer reviewed journals and was formerly the co-editor of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal and U.S. editor of the Journal of Mental Health. He is a recipient of the Michael S. Neale Award from Division 18 (Psychologists in Public Service) of the American Psychological Association and the Armin Leob Research Award from United States Psychiatric Rehabilitation Association. Hs research focuses psychosocial treatments for people with serious mental illnesses. Dr George Szmukler is Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry and Society, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London. He has been Dean of the Institute of Psychiatry, consultant psychiatrist, South London and Maudsley NHS Trust, and a Visiting Professor in the Department of Sociology at the London School of Economics. His research interests have included: eating disorders, health services research, service users and carers as partners in conducting research, ethical and legal aspects of psychiatry - especially reform of mental health legislation - and research on methods aimed at reducing coercion in mental health care.
* Section 1 - Introduction
* 1: Introduction to community mental health
* Section 2 - Origins of 'community psychiatry'
* 2: Historical changes in mental health practice
* 3: Mental health policy in modern America
* 4: Recovery as an integrative paradigm in mental health
* Section 3 - Needs: perspectives and assessment
* 5: The application of epidemiology to mental disorders
* 6: Treated and untreated prevalence of mental disorder
* 7: Expertise from experience: mental health recovery and wellness
* 8: Measuring the needs of people with mental illness
* 9: Mental health, ethnicity and cultural diversity: evidence and
challenges
* 10: Responding to migration and upheaval
* Section 4 - Treatment and service components
* 11: Early intervention for mental health and substance use disorders
* 12: Organising the range of community mental health services
* 13: Crisis and emergency services
* 14: Early intervention for people with psychotic disorders
* 15: Case management and assertive community treatment
* 16: Medication treatment
* 17: Psychiatric outpatient clinics
* 18: Day hospital and partial hospitalisation programmes
* 19: In-patient treatment
* 20: Residential care
* 21: Individual placement and support: the evidence-based practice of
supported employment
* 22: Programmes to support family members and caregivers
* 23: Managing co-occurring physical disorders in mental health care
* 24: Illness self-management programmes
* 25: Co-occurring substance use disorders
* 26: Behavioural health technologies including telehealth
* 27: Forensic community mental health services
* Section 5 - Ethical and legal aspects
* 28: Ethical framework for community mental health
* 29: International human rights and community mental health
* 30: Treatment pressures, coercion and compulsion
* Section 6 - Stigma and discrimination
* 31: Public knowledge and awareness about mental illnesses
* 32: Reducing stigma and discriminatory behaviour
* Section 7 - Policies and the funding
* 33: Shaping national mental health policies
* 34: Funding mental health services
* Section 8 - Assessing the evidence for effectiveness
* 35: Research designs and evaluating treatment interventions
* 36: Qualitative research methods in mental health
* 37: Developing evidence-based mental health practices
* Section 9 - Methods for ensuring that effective care is provided
* 38: Implementing guidelines
* Section 10 - Global mental health
* 39: Global burden of disease and mental disorders
* 40: Planning mental health care at the national level
* 41: Contributions of religious, alternative and complementary
practitioners
* 42: Planning and implementing community services for a district
* 43: Mental health aspects of pandemics
* 44: 'Mental health' in low- and middle-income countries
* 45: Overcoming impediments to community mental health in low and
middle income countries
* Section 11 - Looking to the future
* 46: Summing up: community mental health in the future
* 1: Introduction to community mental health
* Section 2 - Origins of 'community psychiatry'
* 2: Historical changes in mental health practice
* 3: Mental health policy in modern America
* 4: Recovery as an integrative paradigm in mental health
* Section 3 - Needs: perspectives and assessment
* 5: The application of epidemiology to mental disorders
* 6: Treated and untreated prevalence of mental disorder
* 7: Expertise from experience: mental health recovery and wellness
* 8: Measuring the needs of people with mental illness
* 9: Mental health, ethnicity and cultural diversity: evidence and
challenges
* 10: Responding to migration and upheaval
* Section 4 - Treatment and service components
* 11: Early intervention for mental health and substance use disorders
* 12: Organising the range of community mental health services
* 13: Crisis and emergency services
* 14: Early intervention for people with psychotic disorders
* 15: Case management and assertive community treatment
* 16: Medication treatment
* 17: Psychiatric outpatient clinics
* 18: Day hospital and partial hospitalisation programmes
* 19: In-patient treatment
* 20: Residential care
* 21: Individual placement and support: the evidence-based practice of
supported employment
* 22: Programmes to support family members and caregivers
* 23: Managing co-occurring physical disorders in mental health care
* 24: Illness self-management programmes
* 25: Co-occurring substance use disorders
* 26: Behavioural health technologies including telehealth
* 27: Forensic community mental health services
* Section 5 - Ethical and legal aspects
* 28: Ethical framework for community mental health
* 29: International human rights and community mental health
* 30: Treatment pressures, coercion and compulsion
* Section 6 - Stigma and discrimination
* 31: Public knowledge and awareness about mental illnesses
* 32: Reducing stigma and discriminatory behaviour
* Section 7 - Policies and the funding
* 33: Shaping national mental health policies
* 34: Funding mental health services
* Section 8 - Assessing the evidence for effectiveness
* 35: Research designs and evaluating treatment interventions
* 36: Qualitative research methods in mental health
* 37: Developing evidence-based mental health practices
* Section 9 - Methods for ensuring that effective care is provided
* 38: Implementing guidelines
* Section 10 - Global mental health
* 39: Global burden of disease and mental disorders
* 40: Planning mental health care at the national level
* 41: Contributions of religious, alternative and complementary
practitioners
* 42: Planning and implementing community services for a district
* 43: Mental health aspects of pandemics
* 44: 'Mental health' in low- and middle-income countries
* 45: Overcoming impediments to community mental health in low and
middle income countries
* Section 11 - Looking to the future
* 46: Summing up: community mental health in the future
* Section 1 - Introduction
* 1: Introduction to community mental health
* Section 2 - Origins of 'community psychiatry'
* 2: Historical changes in mental health practice
* 3: Mental health policy in modern America
* 4: Recovery as an integrative paradigm in mental health
* Section 3 - Needs: perspectives and assessment
* 5: The application of epidemiology to mental disorders
* 6: Treated and untreated prevalence of mental disorder
* 7: Expertise from experience: mental health recovery and wellness
* 8: Measuring the needs of people with mental illness
* 9: Mental health, ethnicity and cultural diversity: evidence and
challenges
* 10: Responding to migration and upheaval
* Section 4 - Treatment and service components
* 11: Early intervention for mental health and substance use disorders
* 12: Organising the range of community mental health services
* 13: Crisis and emergency services
* 14: Early intervention for people with psychotic disorders
* 15: Case management and assertive community treatment
* 16: Medication treatment
* 17: Psychiatric outpatient clinics
* 18: Day hospital and partial hospitalisation programmes
* 19: In-patient treatment
* 20: Residential care
* 21: Individual placement and support: the evidence-based practice of
supported employment
* 22: Programmes to support family members and caregivers
* 23: Managing co-occurring physical disorders in mental health care
* 24: Illness self-management programmes
* 25: Co-occurring substance use disorders
* 26: Behavioural health technologies including telehealth
* 27: Forensic community mental health services
* Section 5 - Ethical and legal aspects
* 28: Ethical framework for community mental health
* 29: International human rights and community mental health
* 30: Treatment pressures, coercion and compulsion
* Section 6 - Stigma and discrimination
* 31: Public knowledge and awareness about mental illnesses
* 32: Reducing stigma and discriminatory behaviour
* Section 7 - Policies and the funding
* 33: Shaping national mental health policies
* 34: Funding mental health services
* Section 8 - Assessing the evidence for effectiveness
* 35: Research designs and evaluating treatment interventions
* 36: Qualitative research methods in mental health
* 37: Developing evidence-based mental health practices
* Section 9 - Methods for ensuring that effective care is provided
* 38: Implementing guidelines
* Section 10 - Global mental health
* 39: Global burden of disease and mental disorders
* 40: Planning mental health care at the national level
* 41: Contributions of religious, alternative and complementary
practitioners
* 42: Planning and implementing community services for a district
* 43: Mental health aspects of pandemics
* 44: 'Mental health' in low- and middle-income countries
* 45: Overcoming impediments to community mental health in low and
middle income countries
* Section 11 - Looking to the future
* 46: Summing up: community mental health in the future
* 1: Introduction to community mental health
* Section 2 - Origins of 'community psychiatry'
* 2: Historical changes in mental health practice
* 3: Mental health policy in modern America
* 4: Recovery as an integrative paradigm in mental health
* Section 3 - Needs: perspectives and assessment
* 5: The application of epidemiology to mental disorders
* 6: Treated and untreated prevalence of mental disorder
* 7: Expertise from experience: mental health recovery and wellness
* 8: Measuring the needs of people with mental illness
* 9: Mental health, ethnicity and cultural diversity: evidence and
challenges
* 10: Responding to migration and upheaval
* Section 4 - Treatment and service components
* 11: Early intervention for mental health and substance use disorders
* 12: Organising the range of community mental health services
* 13: Crisis and emergency services
* 14: Early intervention for people with psychotic disorders
* 15: Case management and assertive community treatment
* 16: Medication treatment
* 17: Psychiatric outpatient clinics
* 18: Day hospital and partial hospitalisation programmes
* 19: In-patient treatment
* 20: Residential care
* 21: Individual placement and support: the evidence-based practice of
supported employment
* 22: Programmes to support family members and caregivers
* 23: Managing co-occurring physical disorders in mental health care
* 24: Illness self-management programmes
* 25: Co-occurring substance use disorders
* 26: Behavioural health technologies including telehealth
* 27: Forensic community mental health services
* Section 5 - Ethical and legal aspects
* 28: Ethical framework for community mental health
* 29: International human rights and community mental health
* 30: Treatment pressures, coercion and compulsion
* Section 6 - Stigma and discrimination
* 31: Public knowledge and awareness about mental illnesses
* 32: Reducing stigma and discriminatory behaviour
* Section 7 - Policies and the funding
* 33: Shaping national mental health policies
* 34: Funding mental health services
* Section 8 - Assessing the evidence for effectiveness
* 35: Research designs and evaluating treatment interventions
* 36: Qualitative research methods in mental health
* 37: Developing evidence-based mental health practices
* Section 9 - Methods for ensuring that effective care is provided
* 38: Implementing guidelines
* Section 10 - Global mental health
* 39: Global burden of disease and mental disorders
* 40: Planning mental health care at the national level
* 41: Contributions of religious, alternative and complementary
practitioners
* 42: Planning and implementing community services for a district
* 43: Mental health aspects of pandemics
* 44: 'Mental health' in low- and middle-income countries
* 45: Overcoming impediments to community mental health in low and
middle income countries
* Section 11 - Looking to the future
* 46: Summing up: community mental health in the future







