Written by nationally recognized researchers in the field, the book is an important and timely contribution to psychiatry.... This is an excellent book on the critical conceptual issues of psychiatric diagnosis. I highly recommend it.

- Michael J. Schrift, D.O., Doody's Health Science Review

In summary, Advancing DSM provides a thorough overview of the many issues that must be addressed as we move toward DSM-V. Although the ideas presented are at times controversial, the authors have taken great care to summarize the pertinent research literature and have drawn conclusions based on scientific data, to the extent possible, with clear calls for research in areas in which data are lacking. Advancing DSM is a valuable contribution that will stimulate research and provoke discussion on a number of important topics that must be addressed before DSM-V. In reading Advancing DSM, it has been reassuring to learn that scholars are already devoting considerable effort toward this end.

- Karen K. Saules, Ph.D., The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease

This book is recommended for those willing to look critically at the DSM-IV foundation on which they are standing.

- Roger Peele, M.D., American Journal of Psychiatry

In Advancing DSM, leading psychiatric clinicians and researchers contribute case studies that are unresolved, are rife with controversy, and illuminate limitations of the current diagnostic system. Along with analysis of clinical cases, the contributors recommend broad changes to DSM to incorporate new knowledge from psychiatry and neuroscience and findings from new methods of diagnostic testing. Advancing DSM is a rich treasury of intriguing information for all clinicians and researchers. You will • Develop an understanding of some of the shortfalls of the current system that will help you make better clinical decisions. Accurate diagnosis is the foundation for selecting the best treatment, determining prognosis, and enhancing our understanding of patients. With the help of real-world case examples, you'll develop a solid understanding of the complexities involved in making clinical diagnoses.• Learn about developments that will advance future editions of DSM. Find out how new developments in psychiatry and neuroscience and new diagnostic testing tools such as functional MRI are changing the face of psychiatric diagnosis and will inform future editions of DSM.• Be alerted to some of the vital questions that must be answered before a new DSM is developed. Each chapter raises important questions to answer if we are to develop new, more accurate, and more reliable diagnoses. For example, how do we determine the causes of mental disorders? How do we define a mental disorder? How should the groupings of disorders be revised to reflect information on etiology and pathophysiology? What are the implications of laboratory testing and neuroimaging for psychiatric diagnosis and practice? and many more. DSM has been a landmark achievement for the field. By allowing reliable diagnosis, it has brought order out of chaos and fostered groundbreaking advances in research and clinical care. Advancing DSM will brief you on exciting changes in psychiatry today that will impact the DSM of tomorrow.
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This book present diagnostic dilemmas from clinical practice that are intriguing, controversial, unresolved, and remarkable in their theoretical and scientific complexity. Chapters present a specific case study of a disorder or an area of diagnosis that illuminates the need for a revised diagnostic system.
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ContributorsForewordAcknowledgmentsIntroductionChapter 1. Determining Causation in PsychiatryChapter 2. Clarifying the Distinction Between Disorder and Nondisorder: Confronting the Overdiagnosis (False Positives) Problem in DSM-VChapter 3. Should the DSM Diagnostic Groupings Be Changed?Chapter 4. Laboratory Testing and Neuroimaging: Implications for Psychiatric Diagnosis and PracticeChapter 5. Insights From Neuroscience for the Concept of Schizotaxia and the Diagnosis of SchizophreniaChapter 6. Subthreshold Mental Disorders: Nosological and Research RecommendationsChapter 7. Multiaxial Assessment in the Twenty-First CenturyChapter 8. Diagnostic Dilemmas in Classifying Personality DisorderChapter 9. Relationship Disorders Are Psychiatric Disorders: Five Reasons They Were Not Included in DSM-IVIndex
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Psychiatric diagnosis is indispensable to treatment, prognosis, and research in psychiatry and is used in other areas of medicine, law, education, criminal justice, the regulation of drugs by the FDA, and other arenas as well. Yet the current DSM system is a work in progress that will be altered by emerging knowledge about the causes of mental disorders, diagnostic tools such as functional MRI, and developments in neuroscience—all new since DSM-IV was issued. In Advancing DSM: Dilemmas in Psychiatric Diagnosis, leading clinicians and researchers present diagnostic dilemmas from clinical practice that are intriguing, controversial, unresolved, and remarkable in their theoretical and scientific complexity. Chapters present a specific case study of a disorder or an area of diagnosis that illuminates the need for a revised diagnostic system. Chapter by chapter, Advancing DSM raises important, clinically relevant questions about the nature of diagnosis under the current DSM system and recommends new approaches. DSM has been a landmark achievement for the field. By allowing reliable diagnosis, it has brought order out of chaos and fostered groundbreaking advances in research and clinical care. Advancing DSM updates readers on exciting changes in psychiatry today that will impact the DSM of tomorrow.
Les mer
Written by nationally recognized researchers in the field, the book is an important and timely contribution to psychiatry.... This is an excellent book on the critical conceptual issues of psychiatric diagnosis. I highly recommend it.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780890422939
Publisert
2002-12-09
Utgiver
Vendor
American Psychiatric Association Publishing
Vekt
435 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
150 mm
Dybde
6 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
264

Om bidragsyterne

Katharine A. Phillips, M.D., is Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Human Behavior at Brown University School of Medicine and Director of the Body Dysmorphic Disorder Program at Butler Hospital in Providence, Rhode Island. Michael B. First, M.D., is Research Psychiatrist at the New York State Psychiatric Institute and Associate Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York, New York. Harold Alan Pincus, M.D., is Professor and Executive Vice Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry in the Western Psychiatric Institute and Clinic at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, and Senior Scientist and Director of RAND at the University of Pittsburgh Health Research Institute in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.