Critical Thinking in Clinical Assessment and Diagnosis
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Springer International Publishing AG
Published:17th Oct '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
"This much-needed volume brings to the clinician or student some of the best critical-minded analysis by some of the most insightful thinkers about psychiatric diagnosis today. The thought-provoking questions these essays raise, and the multifaceted and provocative answers they provide, cultivate sensitivity to the nuances of diagnostic assessment that often makes the difference between clinical success and failure." - Jerome C. Wakefield, PhD, DSW, New York University Silver School of Social Work, New York
This transformative resource challenges social workers and mental health professionals to rethink their approaches to assessment and diagnosis from the ground up. Among the book’s unique features are its use of diverse lenses to examine a common case and its illustration of how multiple perspectives can be integrated for a richly textured portrait of the individual in context. Equally crucial is the book’s commitment to professional development, from exercises to improve case conceptualization to strategies for teaching and learning.
Topics include:
- The DSM-5 definition of mental disorder: critique and alternatives.
- Making assessment decisions: macro, mezzo, and micro perspectives.
- Neuroscience, resilience, and the embodiment of “mental” disorder.
- Narrative, psychodynamic, and cultural conceptualizations of disorder.
- Person-centered and contextualized diagnosis in mental health.
- Meeting the challenge of teaching integrated assessment.
Critical Thinking in Clinical Assessment and Diagnosis has much to offer professionals, researchers, and educators in the fields of social work and mental health. <
"Barbara Probst’s much-needed volume brings to the clinician or student some of the best critical-minded analysis by some of the most insightful thinkers about psychiatric diagnosis today. The authors demonstrate that the complex nature of clinical reality can emerge only through the give and take of critical thinking in the course of assessment. The thought-provoking questions these essays raise, and the multifaceted and provocative answers they provide, cultivate sensitivity to the nuances of diagnostic assessment that often makes the difference between clinical success and failure."
- Jerome C. Wakefield, PhD, DSW, University Professor and Professor of Social Work, New York University Silver School of Social Work; co-author of The Loss of Sadness: How Psychiatry Transformed Normal Sorrow into Depressive Disorder and All We Have to Fear: Psychiatry's Transformation of Natural Anxieties into Mental Disorders.
"This book is an absolute gift to the social work profession, especially to social work educators who seek scholarly work that can guide students to think critically about clinical assessment and diagnosis. With this collection by many of the brightest and most articulate voices in social work, students and clinicians are invited to better understand and judiciously apply a wide range of theoretical and empirical lenses. This thought-provoking yet practical text is sure to be required in many social work programs."
-Tally Moses, PhD, University of Wisconsin-Madison
ISBN: 9783319383118
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 4861g
304 pages
Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2015