Since the 1970s, the development of normalization philosophy and
the implementation of community care policies have highlighted the
nature and treatment of psychiatric and behavior disorders in
people with mental retardation and rekindled the interest of
scientists, psychiatric practitioners, and service providers. With
these changes has grown a substantial body of new research and
information on the phenomenology, epidemiology, classification, and
clinical features of mental illness and behavior disorders in
mentally retarded persons.
In response to this growing interest and awareness, the editors,
together with internationally renowned contributors from the United
States and Europe, have compiled the first comprehensive handbook
of the current theory and practice of mental health treatment and
care in mentally retarded children and adults.
Both contemporary and in-depth, this multidisciplinary,
multidimensional volume covers all available therapeutic methods,
including psychopharmacotherapy, psychotherapy, behavior therapies,
cognitive therapy, and the systems approach for all the main
diagnostic disorders in people with mental retardation.
Parts I and II present an overview of epidemiology and clinical
presentation, including research trends, and therapeutic methods,
including psychotherapy, psychopharmacology, behavioral therapies,
cognitive and social learning treatments, and working with families
and caregivers.
Parts III and IV focus on psychotherapeutic interventions, such
as rational emotive group treatment with dually diagnosed adults,
pre-therapy for persons with mental retardation who are also
psychotic, and systemic therapy, and how to apply these methods to
the treatment of specific mental illnesses, such as schizophrenia,
epilepsy, and mood and anxiety disorders.
Parts V and VI discuss how to treat behavior disorders such as
aggression/self-aggression (pharmacotherapy and strategic
behavioral interventions) and self-injurious behaviors (multimodal
contextual approach), including group therapy for sex offenders and
a pedagogical approach to behavior problems, and which treatment
methods, such as psychodynamically oriented psychotherapy and
pharmacotherapy, are most effective with children, including
developmental-dynamic relationship therapy with more severely
mentally retarded children.
Parts VII and VIII provide guidance on mental health services
and staff training, including psychiatric treatment in community
care and a model for inpatient services for mentally ill persons
with mental retardation, and the editors final chapter, which draws
together all the various therapeutic approaches described in
previous chapters to provide a practical framework for an
integrative approach.
Filling a major gap in the literature, this indispensable
resource for psychiatrists, psychologists, and educators working
with mentally retarded persons is also intended for general
practitioners, doctors, social workers, and therapists working in
the same or related fields.
General
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