A Companion to the Classification of Mental Disorders
Norman Sartorius author John E Cooper author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:29th Aug '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
A Companion to the Classification of Mental Disorders provides essential reading as a background and supplement to both the recently produced DSM-5 and the forthcoming ICD-11. It focuses on the processes of classification and diagnosis, and the uses for these classifications. The book emphasises the dangers of regarding any current psychiatric classification as true or complete, in view of the present partial state of knowledge about the causes and mechanisms of most mental and behavioural disorders. This book is unique in containing a number of chapters that give a brief history of the cooperative efforts and projects necessary for the production of internationally agreed psychiatric classifications. The discussion begins in 1965 with the US/UK Diagnostic study, the preparations for ICD-8 with its first international glossary, and the International Pilot Study of Schizophrenia, designed and coordinated by the World Health Organization. While recognizing the importance of the innovations of the DSM series of classifications of the American Psychiatric Association, the book also takes a truly international perspective. The expert authors are well placed to do this, having been personally involved in many of the collaborative studies and developments discussed. A Companion to the Classification of Mental Disorders is an illustration of how much international collaborative work has been necessary over several decades to produce the currently agreed classifications. There is still a long way to go, but a start has been made.
The book is divided into a large number of small chapters and includes several useful appendices. This helps accessibility, allowing the reader to dip in and out of sections of interest. . . [It] provides context to current classification systems, acknowledges the limitations of each and encourages the reader to think more deeply about classification. * Deborah Cooper, ST4 in General Adult Psychiatry, NHS Fife, in The Psychiatric Bulletin *
This crucial book focuses on a pivotal issue for the future of psychiatry as a medical discipline. Anyone interested in placing psychiatry on a scientific foundation needs to read this book -- it is a fascinating read. * Michael Joel Schrift, D.O., M.A.,University of Illinois at Chicago College of Medicine, Doody's Notes *
This book is of use to anyone working on medical classification, whether in sociology, literary studies, the health sciences, and so forth. * Years Work in Critical and Cultural Theory *
ISBN: 9780199669493
Dimensions: 215mm x 142mm x 10mm
Weight: 210g
160 pages