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Descriptions and prescriptions : values, mental disorders, and the DSMs /

Annotation Most everyone agrees that having pneumonia or a broken leg is always a bad thing, but not everyone agrees that sadness, grief, anxiety, or even hallucinations are always bad things. This fundamental disjunction in how disease and disorders are valued is the basis for the considerations in...

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Други автори: Sadler, John Z., 1953-
Формат: Електронна книга
Език: English
Публикувано: Baltimore, Md. : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2002.
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Онлайн достъп: http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=75756
Подобни документи: Print version:: Descriptions and prescriptions.
Съдържание:
  • Ch. 1. Introduction
  • Ch. 2. The limits of an evidence-based classification of mental disorders
  • Ch. 3. Values, politics, and science in the construction of the DSMs
  • Ch. 4. Values and objectivity in psychiatric nosology
  • Ch. 5. Survival of the fittest? Conceptual selection in psychiatric nosology
  • Ch. 6. Technical reason in the DSM-IV: an unacknowledged value
  • Ch. 7. Implications of a pragmatic theory of disease for the DSMs
  • Ch. 8. Rethinking normativism in psychiatric classification
  • Ch. 9. Evaluation and devaluation in personality assessment
  • Ch. 10. Values and the validity of diagnostic criteria: disvalued versus disordered conditions of childhood and adolescence
  • Ch. 11. Implications of an embrace: the DSMs, happiness, and capability
  • Ch. 12. Why criteria of involuntary action are value laden
  • Ch. 13. The hegemony of the DSMs
  • Ch. 14. What patients and families look for in psychiatric diagnosis
  • Ch. 15. Softened science in the courtroom: forensic implications of a value-laden classification
  • Ch. 16. Speaking across the border: a patient assessment of located languages, values, and credentials in psychiatric classification
  • Ch. 17. Psychotherapists as authors: microlevel analysis of therapists' written reports
  • Ch. 18. Clinical and etiological psychiatric diagnoses: Do causes count?
  • Ch. 19. Defining genetically informed phenotypes for the DSM-V
  • Ch. 20. Values in developing psychiatric classifications: a proposal for the DSM-V
  • Ch. 21. Report to the chair of the DSM-VI task force from the editors of Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology, "Contentious and noncontentious evaluative language in psychiatric diagnosis" (Dateline 2010).