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Substance Abuse and Psychopathology
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 176

Substance Abuse and Psychopathology

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1984
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Cocaine
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 224

Cocaine

Sports heroes, executives, and the homeless -- cocaine permeates every inch of our society, with tragic results. Although casual use of cocaine has clearly declined, the number of daily users, in particular those using crack, continues to climb. Why do people continue to use cocaine? What is its appeal? How does it affect the body and mind? What can a person do if a family member or friend is using cocaine? In the past decade, the introduction of "crack" has increased the popularity of cocaine. Treatments have changed to adapt to this new, cheaper, more widely available drug. This Second Edition of Cocaine -- by three noted psychiatrists from Harvard University and the University of Utah -- ...

Psychiatric Treatment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 362

Psychiatric Treatment

Increasingly, mental health policy planners and third-party payers are demanding data that demonstrate the efficacy of psychiatric care in achieving agreed-upon treatment goals. Psychiatric Treatment - Advances in Outcome Research summarizes the work to date in the important area of treatment outcome research. The rationale for measuring treatment outcome and a sampling of outcome studies in children, adolescents, and young adults treated in inpatient settings is reviewed. The focus on studies of both short- and long-term treatment outcome within specific diagnostic subgroups - including patients with schizophrenia, affective illnesses, alcoholism, eating disorders and various types of personality disorders - is also addressed. uncertainty.

The Heroin Stimulus
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 299

The Heroin Stimulus

The simple fact that the authors were able to give injectable heroin to volunteers for addictive self-administration at a Harvard facility may elude the notice it deserves. On the other hand, resec:irch questions center ing on whether heroin is linked to a craving for pleasure or relief of pain might raise the transplanted hackles of those who simplistically see scien tists as pursuing only transparent trivialities. In truth, this report is about a historical and pioneering step in clinical research on a major unsolved problem of the biological-social-psychological roots of addiction. The research questions posed are clearly relevant both to the design of effec tive treatments (and treatment policy) and to the basic science search that could help our understanding of how addictive drugs capture such power ful control over behavior. Heroin was synthesized and has been available, along with aspirin, for over three-quarters of a century. Yet with all the tools of Western sci ence, and with the enormous and growing social, personal, and economic costs of world-wide heroin use, we-surprisingly--

The Practitioner’s Guide to Psychoactive Drugs
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 522

The Practitioner’s Guide to Psychoactive Drugs

In the eight years since the publication of the second edition of this Guide, psycho phannacotherapy has made many advances not only through the discovery of new medications but by the effective directing of their use to an ever-increasing variety of clinical disorders. These welcome developments are reflected in the concurrent growth and development of the Guide itself, which now enters adulthood with renewed vigor. Under the thoughtful and scholarly leadership of Dr. Alan Gelenberg, the third edition has undergone a significant transformation designed to meet the needs of the modem clinician. The panel of contributors is nearly double that of the former edition with the addition of nine ne...

The Practitioner's Guide to Psychoactive Drugs
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 445

The Practitioner's Guide to Psychoactive Drugs

Books, like people, are born, and, if they survive the trauma of birth, mature in response to a changing environment. This volume is no exception. It imme diately proved its usefulness to psychiatric clinicians upon its publication six years ago, and it is not surprising to find it now entering a new phase of life in a second edition. The many and significant changes that the reader will find herein reflect not only the rapid growth of knowledge in the field of psy chopharmacology but also the editors' wise awareness of the need to incorpo rate that knowledge into clinical practice. Important new sections have been added on the management of elderly patients, on the pharmacological approach ...

Emergency Psychiatry
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 448

Emergency Psychiatry

This eagerly awaited volume occupies an important place in the series Critical Issues in Psychiatry. Most mental health professionals are quite at home with ordinary day-to-day crises of clinical practice but relatively unprepared for the true psychiatric emergency. Such emergencies are too infrequent for most of us to experience a real sense of competence. On the other hand, emergency room psychiatrists as well as residents and other trainees have long wished for a truly comprehensive textbook that would cover the spectrum of emergency psychiatry. This book is just such a definitive and comprehensive volume for the specialist, while at the same time a clear, succinct, and comprehensive refe...