Key Concepts in Mental Health

Front Cover
SAGE, Nov 13, 2009 - Medical - 216 pages
Electronic Inspection Copy available for instructors here

"This book wins on two levels: not only is there an extensive range of concepts presented (including some that are unexpected yet clearly relevant), there is also a succinct, thorough and critical dissection of each. Recommended, if not essential, reading for all student mental health professionals." - Dr Steven Pryjmachuk, Head of Mental Health Division, School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work, University of Manchester

Mental health is an area that new students and trainee practitioners often find bewildering. This book cuts through the stigma associated with this topic. It delivers bite-sized chunks of information that cover the central concepts and debates which shape contemporary views about mental health and illness. As this book shows, these key concepts not only influence our understanding of mental health, but also govern the provision of services for people with mental-health problems.

Drawing together perspectives from sociology, psychiatry, psychology and ethics, the vital topics in mental health are examined in three parts:

- PART ONE: Mental Health and Mental-Health Problems explores theories and understandings of mental health and illness

- PART TWO: Mental Health Services looks at the structure and organization of mental health service delivery, past and present

- PART THREE: Mental Health and Society studies the social context.

This new edition adds 10 new concepts as well as updating the previous entries. New topics include childhood adversity, recovery, spirituality, well-being, social and cultural capital, quality of mental-health services, evidence-based practice, and work and mental health. This book will be invaluable for trainee health professionals, including clinical psychologists, social workers, nurses, counsellors and psychotherapists.

 

Selected pages

Contents

acknowledgements
1947
authors preface
1949
Part 1 Mental Health and Mental Health Problems
1951
Mental Health
1953
Psychiatric Diagnosis
1956
Psychiatric Epidemiology
1961
Functional and Organic Mental Illnesses
1972
The Myth of Mental Illness
1975
The Quality of Mental Health Care
2001
EvidenceBased Practice
2004
Recovery
2007
Coercion
2010
Corruption of Care
2010
Malpractice
1944
The Mental Health Service Users Movement
1947
Part 3 Mental Health and Society
1951

Madness
1979
Sadness
1982
Fear
1923
Personality Disorders
1926
Selfharm
1931
Substance Misuse
1934
Learning Disability
1938
Causes and Constructs
1942
Physical Health
1945
Wellbeing
1948
Pleasure
1951
Creativity
1955
Spirituality
1958
Lay Views of Mental Health and Illness
1962
Eating Disorders
1965
Part 2 Mental Health Services
1970
Primary Care
1972
Acute Mental Health Services
1974
Forensic Mental Health Services
1977
Serviceuser Involvement
1981
Carers
1984
Mental Health Professionals
1987
Biological Interventions
1991
Psychological Interventions
1994
Financial Aspects of Mental Health
1997
Mental Health Policy
1953
Mental Health Promotion
1956
Segregation
1960
Eugenics
1964
Capacity and Culpability
1966
Antipsychiatry
1970
Labelling Theory
1973
Stigma
1976
Social and Cultural Capital
1979
Social Exclusion
1982
Work
1985
Risks to and from People with Mental Health Problems
1988
The Mass Media
1992
Social Models of Mental Health
1992
Suicide
1994
Crosscultural Psychiatry
1994
Social Class
1994
Race
1994
Gender
1994
Age
1994
Childhood Adversity
1997
The Pharmaceutical Industry
2000
Warfare
2003
Copyright

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About the author (2009)

David Pilgrim is Professor of Health and Social Policy, Department of Sociology, Social Policy and Criminology at the University of Liverpool, UK. After training and working as a clinical psychologist he completed a PhD examining psychotherapy in the organisational setting of the British NHS. He then went on the complete a Master’s in sociology. He has worked at the boundary between clinical psychology and medical sociology for the past twenty years and has produced over 60 articles in peer-reviewed journals, based upon his research into mental health policy and practice. His years working in the British NHS provided him with extensive everyday experience of the theoretical and policy aspects of mental health expressed in practical settings. One his books, A Sociology of Mental Health and Illness (3rd edition, Open University Press, 2005), co-authored with Anne Rogers, won the British Medical Association’s medical book of the year award for 2006. Currently he is writing a book on critical realism and mental health (Routledge, 2014) and is co-editing (with John Hall) a book on the history of British clinical psychology for the British Psychological Society. This will commemorate the fiftieth anniversary in 2015 of the establishment in the latter of the Division of Clinical Psychology.

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