Seeking to integrate the large volume of clinical research on
relational processes and mental health disorders with other
scientific advances in psychiatry, Relational Processes and DSM-V
builds on exciting advances in clinical research on troubled
relationships. These advances included marked improvements in the
assessment and epidemiology of troubled relationships as well the
use of genetics, neuroscience, and immunology to explore the
importance of close relationships in clinical practice. Advances in
family-based intervention, and prevention are also highlighted to
help practitioners and researchers find common ground and begin an
empirically based discussion about the best way to revise the DSM.
Given the overwhelming research showing that relationships play a
role in regulating neurobiology and genetic expression and are
critical for understanding schizophrenia, conduct disorder, and
depression among other disorders, relational processes must be a
part of any empirically based plan for revising psychiatric
nosology in DSM-V.
The chapters in this book counter the perspective that we can
safely discard the biopsychosocial model that has guided psychiatry
in the past. The contributors examine the relevance of close
relationships in such issues as the basic psychopathology of mental
disorders, factors influencing maintenance and relapse, sources of
burden for family members, and guiding family-based interventions.
By tying relational processes to basic research on psychopathology,
they demonstrate the value of integrating basic behavioral and
brain research with a sophisticated understanding of the
self-organizing and self-sustaining characteristics of
relationships. Coverage includes: - research linking relational
processes to neuroscience, neurobiology, health outcomes,
intervention research, prevention research, and genetics-
consideration of specific circumstances, such as promoting healthy
parenting following divorce and relational processes in depressed
Latino adolescents- optimal approaches to the assessment of
relational processes with clinical significance, such as child
abuse, partner abuse, and expressed emotion.- a simple introduction
to the methodology of taxometrics, offering insight into whether
key relational processes are distinct categories or continuously
distributed variables- an overview of the links between relational
processes and psychiatric outcomes, providing a theoretical
foundation for the discussion of links to psychopathology
Together, these contributions seek to develop a shared
commitment among clinicians, researchers, and psychopathologists to
take seriously the issue of relational processes as they relate to
diagnoses within DSM-and to encourage mental health care workers at
all levels to harness the generative and healing properties of
intimate relationships and make them a focus of clinical practice.
It is a book that will prove useful to all who are interested in
integrating greater sensitivity to relational processes in their
work.
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