Practical Psychiatric Epidemiology
Herausgeber: Das-Munshi, Jayati; Stewart, Robert; Prince, Martin; Hotopf, Matthew; Ford, Tamsin
Schade – dieser Artikel ist leider ausverkauft. Sobald wir wissen, ob und wann der Artikel wieder verfügbar ist, informieren wir Sie an dieser Stelle.
Practical Psychiatric Epidemiology
Herausgeber: Das-Munshi, Jayati; Stewart, Robert; Prince, Martin; Hotopf, Matthew; Ford, Tamsin
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Looking to the future of the ever-evolving field of psychiatric epidemiology, this new edition covers the many advances in the field since the release of the first. With new content on key topics from bioethics to life course epidemiology, this new edition will continue to be an invaluable reference for clinicians in practice and in training.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Reimagining Psychiatric Epidemiology in a Global Frame150,99 €
- Raj S. Bhopal (Alexander Bruce and John Usher Professor of Public HConcepts of Epidemiology77,99 €
- Psychiatric and Behavioral Emergencies, an Issue of Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America126,99 €
- Shawn Christopher Shea (Training Institute for Suicide As DirectorPsychiatric Interviewing101,99 €
- Allan Tasman (USA University of Louisville School of Medicine)The Psychiatric Interview79,99 €
- Kenneth J. Rothman (Distinguished Fellow, Distinguished Fellow, RTIEpidemiology68,99 €
- Bendix Carstensen (Gentofte Steno Diabetes Center and Department oEpidemiology with R59,99 €
-
-
-
Looking to the future of the ever-evolving field of psychiatric epidemiology, this new edition covers the many advances in the field since the release of the first. With new content on key topics from bioethics to life course epidemiology, this new edition will continue to be an invaluable reference for clinicians in practice and in training.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- 2 Revised edition
- Seitenzahl: 464
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 834g
- ISBN-13: 9780198735564
- ISBN-10: 0198735561
- Artikelnr.: 58452382
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- 2 Revised edition
- Seitenzahl: 464
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. Juni 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 244mm x 170mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 834g
- ISBN-13: 9780198735564
- ISBN-10: 0198735561
- Artikelnr.: 58452382
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Jayati Das-Munshi is a consultant psychiatrist and Clinical Scientist Fellow working with the Academy of Medical Sciences and funded by the Health Foundation. Dr Das-Munshi's research focuses on physical health inequalities in those living with severe mental illness and the intersection of migration and ethnicity in patterning health disadvantage. An honorary consultant psychiatrist with South London and Maudsley Trust, Dr Das-Munshi runs an outpatient consultation liaison service for older adults with clinical gerontology at King's College Hoispital. Tamsin Ford is Professor of Child and Adolesscent Psychiatry at the University of Exeter. Upon completion of her PhD in psychiatry at King's College London she moved to the University of Exeter, where she leads a research group on the efficacy of mental health services and interventions for children and young people. From 2008 to 2014 she served as Editor for CAMH, ACAMH's journal, and was awarded a CBE for services to psychiatry in 2019. Matthew Hotopf is Professor of General Hospital Psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology, and Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King's College London. He currently serves as Director of the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust National Institute of Health Research Biomedical Research Centre. Professor Hotopf has published over 300 peer reviewed papers, and was appointed Vice Dean Research of IoPPN in 2017. His main area of research is the intersection of medicine and psychiatry. In 2018 he was awarded a CBE for services to Pyschiatric Research. Martin Prince is Professor of Epidemiological Psychiatry, Head of the Health Services and Population Research Department at King's College London. Professor Prince serves as Director of the NIHR Global Health Research Unit on Health System Strengthening in Sub-Saharan Africa at King's College London (ASSET) and leads the 10/66 Dementia Group's research on ageing and chronic disease in India, China, and Latin America. In 2007 he co-edited the Lancet Global Mental Health series, and helped found the movement for Global Mental Health. Robert Stewart is Professor of Psychiatric Epidemiology and Clinical Informatics at King's College London. He has a particular interest in the nexus point of physical and mental health and leads the Clinical and Population Informatics theme of the SLAM Biomedical Research Centre for Mental Health. Since its inception in 2007, Professor Stewart has served as the academic lead for the Clinical Record Interactive Search (CRIS).
* Section 1 Basic principles
* 1: Preface to the second edition a fourth age of psychiatric
epidemiologya
* 2: Martin Prince and Kia-Chong Chua: Measurement in mental health
* 3: Brandon A. Kohrt and Vikram Patel: Culture and psychiatric
epidemiology
* 4: Buddhika Lalanie Fernando and Athula Sumathipala: Ethics and
research in psychiatry: consent, capacity and bioethics
* 5: Stephani L. Hatch, Billy Gazard and Diana Rose: Ethics and
research in psychiatry: engagement with patients and public
* Section 2 Study design
* 6: Tamsin Ford, Jayati Das-Munshi, and Martin Prince: Introduction to
epidemiological study designs
* 7: Oana Mitrofan and Rose McCabe: Qualitative research
* 8: Jayati Das-Munshi: Ecological studies and studies which consider
place and health
* 9: Martin Prince and Jayati Das-Munshi: Cross-sectional surveys
* 10: Lisa Aschan and Matthew Hotopf: The Case Control Study
* 11: Laura Goodwin and Nicola Fear: Cohort studies
* 12: Sube Banerjee, Rod Taylor, and Jennifer Hellier: Randomised
controlled trials
* 13: Tamsin Ford, Rob Stewart, and Johnny Downs: Surveillance, Case
Registers and Big Data
* 14: Marianna Purgato, Giovanni Ostuzzi, and Corrado Barbui: Research
synthesis: systematic reviews and meta-analysis
* Section 3: Interpretation
* 15: Robert Stewart: Inference 1: chance, bias and confounding
* 16: Robert Stewart: Inference 2: causation
* 17: Jo Thompson-Coon and Becca Abbott: Critical Appraisal
* Section 4: Special topics
* 18: Lisa Aschan, Jayati Das-Munshi, Richard Hayes, Martin Prince,
Marcus Richards, Peter Schofield, and Robert Stewart: Statistical
techniques in Psychiatric Epidemiology
* 19: Frühling Rijsdijk and Paul F. O Reilly: Genetic Epidemiology 1:
Overview
* 20: Craig Morgan, Marta Di Forti, and Helen Fisher: Gene-environment
interaction
* 21: Nicola Voyle, Maximilian Kerz, Steven Kiddle, and Richard Dobson:
Bio-informatics and psychiatric epidemiology
* 22: Margaret Heslin, Paul McCrone, and Daniel Chisolm: Health
economics for psychiatric epidemiology
* 23: Marcus Richards and Rebecca Hardy: Life course epidemiology
* 24: Valentina Iemmi, Nicole Votruba, and Graham Thornicroft:
Evidence-based mental health policy
* 25: Martin Prince, Robert Stewart, Tamsin Ford, Matthew Hotopf, and
Jayati Das-Munshi: Looking to the future
* 1: Preface to the second edition a fourth age of psychiatric
epidemiologya
* 2: Martin Prince and Kia-Chong Chua: Measurement in mental health
* 3: Brandon A. Kohrt and Vikram Patel: Culture and psychiatric
epidemiology
* 4: Buddhika Lalanie Fernando and Athula Sumathipala: Ethics and
research in psychiatry: consent, capacity and bioethics
* 5: Stephani L. Hatch, Billy Gazard and Diana Rose: Ethics and
research in psychiatry: engagement with patients and public
* Section 2 Study design
* 6: Tamsin Ford, Jayati Das-Munshi, and Martin Prince: Introduction to
epidemiological study designs
* 7: Oana Mitrofan and Rose McCabe: Qualitative research
* 8: Jayati Das-Munshi: Ecological studies and studies which consider
place and health
* 9: Martin Prince and Jayati Das-Munshi: Cross-sectional surveys
* 10: Lisa Aschan and Matthew Hotopf: The Case Control Study
* 11: Laura Goodwin and Nicola Fear: Cohort studies
* 12: Sube Banerjee, Rod Taylor, and Jennifer Hellier: Randomised
controlled trials
* 13: Tamsin Ford, Rob Stewart, and Johnny Downs: Surveillance, Case
Registers and Big Data
* 14: Marianna Purgato, Giovanni Ostuzzi, and Corrado Barbui: Research
synthesis: systematic reviews and meta-analysis
* Section 3: Interpretation
* 15: Robert Stewart: Inference 1: chance, bias and confounding
* 16: Robert Stewart: Inference 2: causation
* 17: Jo Thompson-Coon and Becca Abbott: Critical Appraisal
* Section 4: Special topics
* 18: Lisa Aschan, Jayati Das-Munshi, Richard Hayes, Martin Prince,
Marcus Richards, Peter Schofield, and Robert Stewart: Statistical
techniques in Psychiatric Epidemiology
* 19: Frühling Rijsdijk and Paul F. O Reilly: Genetic Epidemiology 1:
Overview
* 20: Craig Morgan, Marta Di Forti, and Helen Fisher: Gene-environment
interaction
* 21: Nicola Voyle, Maximilian Kerz, Steven Kiddle, and Richard Dobson:
Bio-informatics and psychiatric epidemiology
* 22: Margaret Heslin, Paul McCrone, and Daniel Chisolm: Health
economics for psychiatric epidemiology
* 23: Marcus Richards and Rebecca Hardy: Life course epidemiology
* 24: Valentina Iemmi, Nicole Votruba, and Graham Thornicroft:
Evidence-based mental health policy
* 25: Martin Prince, Robert Stewart, Tamsin Ford, Matthew Hotopf, and
Jayati Das-Munshi: Looking to the future
* Section 1 Basic principles
* 1: Preface to the second edition a fourth age of psychiatric
epidemiologya
* 2: Martin Prince and Kia-Chong Chua: Measurement in mental health
* 3: Brandon A. Kohrt and Vikram Patel: Culture and psychiatric
epidemiology
* 4: Buddhika Lalanie Fernando and Athula Sumathipala: Ethics and
research in psychiatry: consent, capacity and bioethics
* 5: Stephani L. Hatch, Billy Gazard and Diana Rose: Ethics and
research in psychiatry: engagement with patients and public
* Section 2 Study design
* 6: Tamsin Ford, Jayati Das-Munshi, and Martin Prince: Introduction to
epidemiological study designs
* 7: Oana Mitrofan and Rose McCabe: Qualitative research
* 8: Jayati Das-Munshi: Ecological studies and studies which consider
place and health
* 9: Martin Prince and Jayati Das-Munshi: Cross-sectional surveys
* 10: Lisa Aschan and Matthew Hotopf: The Case Control Study
* 11: Laura Goodwin and Nicola Fear: Cohort studies
* 12: Sube Banerjee, Rod Taylor, and Jennifer Hellier: Randomised
controlled trials
* 13: Tamsin Ford, Rob Stewart, and Johnny Downs: Surveillance, Case
Registers and Big Data
* 14: Marianna Purgato, Giovanni Ostuzzi, and Corrado Barbui: Research
synthesis: systematic reviews and meta-analysis
* Section 3: Interpretation
* 15: Robert Stewart: Inference 1: chance, bias and confounding
* 16: Robert Stewart: Inference 2: causation
* 17: Jo Thompson-Coon and Becca Abbott: Critical Appraisal
* Section 4: Special topics
* 18: Lisa Aschan, Jayati Das-Munshi, Richard Hayes, Martin Prince,
Marcus Richards, Peter Schofield, and Robert Stewart: Statistical
techniques in Psychiatric Epidemiology
* 19: Frühling Rijsdijk and Paul F. O Reilly: Genetic Epidemiology 1:
Overview
* 20: Craig Morgan, Marta Di Forti, and Helen Fisher: Gene-environment
interaction
* 21: Nicola Voyle, Maximilian Kerz, Steven Kiddle, and Richard Dobson:
Bio-informatics and psychiatric epidemiology
* 22: Margaret Heslin, Paul McCrone, and Daniel Chisolm: Health
economics for psychiatric epidemiology
* 23: Marcus Richards and Rebecca Hardy: Life course epidemiology
* 24: Valentina Iemmi, Nicole Votruba, and Graham Thornicroft:
Evidence-based mental health policy
* 25: Martin Prince, Robert Stewart, Tamsin Ford, Matthew Hotopf, and
Jayati Das-Munshi: Looking to the future
* 1: Preface to the second edition a fourth age of psychiatric
epidemiologya
* 2: Martin Prince and Kia-Chong Chua: Measurement in mental health
* 3: Brandon A. Kohrt and Vikram Patel: Culture and psychiatric
epidemiology
* 4: Buddhika Lalanie Fernando and Athula Sumathipala: Ethics and
research in psychiatry: consent, capacity and bioethics
* 5: Stephani L. Hatch, Billy Gazard and Diana Rose: Ethics and
research in psychiatry: engagement with patients and public
* Section 2 Study design
* 6: Tamsin Ford, Jayati Das-Munshi, and Martin Prince: Introduction to
epidemiological study designs
* 7: Oana Mitrofan and Rose McCabe: Qualitative research
* 8: Jayati Das-Munshi: Ecological studies and studies which consider
place and health
* 9: Martin Prince and Jayati Das-Munshi: Cross-sectional surveys
* 10: Lisa Aschan and Matthew Hotopf: The Case Control Study
* 11: Laura Goodwin and Nicola Fear: Cohort studies
* 12: Sube Banerjee, Rod Taylor, and Jennifer Hellier: Randomised
controlled trials
* 13: Tamsin Ford, Rob Stewart, and Johnny Downs: Surveillance, Case
Registers and Big Data
* 14: Marianna Purgato, Giovanni Ostuzzi, and Corrado Barbui: Research
synthesis: systematic reviews and meta-analysis
* Section 3: Interpretation
* 15: Robert Stewart: Inference 1: chance, bias and confounding
* 16: Robert Stewart: Inference 2: causation
* 17: Jo Thompson-Coon and Becca Abbott: Critical Appraisal
* Section 4: Special topics
* 18: Lisa Aschan, Jayati Das-Munshi, Richard Hayes, Martin Prince,
Marcus Richards, Peter Schofield, and Robert Stewart: Statistical
techniques in Psychiatric Epidemiology
* 19: Frühling Rijsdijk and Paul F. O Reilly: Genetic Epidemiology 1:
Overview
* 20: Craig Morgan, Marta Di Forti, and Helen Fisher: Gene-environment
interaction
* 21: Nicola Voyle, Maximilian Kerz, Steven Kiddle, and Richard Dobson:
Bio-informatics and psychiatric epidemiology
* 22: Margaret Heslin, Paul McCrone, and Daniel Chisolm: Health
economics for psychiatric epidemiology
* 23: Marcus Richards and Rebecca Hardy: Life course epidemiology
* 24: Valentina Iemmi, Nicole Votruba, and Graham Thornicroft:
Evidence-based mental health policy
* 25: Martin Prince, Robert Stewart, Tamsin Ford, Matthew Hotopf, and
Jayati Das-Munshi: Looking to the future