|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Should African American be construed as a race or as an ethnic
group? If African Americans are defined as an ethnic group, what
role does culture play in their lives and how can we measure their
culture? This groundbreaking volume argues that we reject the
concept of race and define African Americans as a cultural group.
It presents the first scale ever devised for measuring
acculturation among African Americans, along with powerful studies
that empirically explore the role of culture and acculturation in
African American behavior, health, and psychology. Among the
authors' findings are how acculturation predicts symptoms--such as
depression and anxiety--and physical problems such as hypertension.
Public and mental health researchers and professionals will find
this book an intriguing and useful presentation of an emerging
approach to psychological and health theory and practice. "I found
this volume to be compelling and informative. I believe that this
book will stimulate a great advance in the way we conceptualize
African American psychology in particular and psychology in
general. The authors do an outstanding job of integrating
perspectives from multiple disciplines into a psychological
perspective and then in applying that perspective to their
empirical work. . . . This is a wonderful book and is of great
service to the field." --Hardin L. K. Coleman, Ph.D., Department of
Counseling Psychology, University of Wisconsin
How frequently do women experience sexist discrimination? Is it
widespread or concentrated in specific populations? Does sexism
have any effect on womenAEs mental or physical health? How can we
measure the impact of sexism, both blatant and subtle, on women
exposed to it? In Discrimination Against Women, authors Hope
Landrine and Elizabeth A. Klonoff offer the first empirically
validated scale for measuring the health effects of sexism and
present their findings from using the scale on a large sample of
women they surveyed. The authors report on their studies assessing
the frequency of discrimination against women and examining the
physical and mental health impact of that discrimination. They
found both that sexist discrimination is rampant in America and
that it contributes significantly to physical and psychiatric
symptoms among women. To make their scientific findings more
accessible across disciplines and professions, the authors have
included contributions from leading psychologists on what women can
do about discrimination in their lives. They then present a review
of the laws regarding discrimination against women to provide women
with basic information on the legal status of discrimination suits.
An appendix offers a guide through the methodological issues
underlying the authorAEs sexism scale and findings and provides a
primer for readers unfamiliar with scientific research and
statistics. This volume is ideally suited to inform clinical
workers and trainers, deepen discussions in womenAEs studies, and
enrich the perspectives of professionals who work with women and
those who establish policies that have an effect on them.
Preventing Misdiagnosis of Women is a crucial resource for all
therapists who treat women. Not only will the information further
the well-being of women clients, but it could literally save lives.
Interesting, readable, and well-organized, this book belongs on the
shelf next to the DSM-IV. The case examples will grip the reader
whether professional or lay audience. --Natalie Porter, Ph.D.,
California School of Professional Psychology "I am greatly
impressed with the book. It is a brand new idea, one that is long
overdue." --Hannah Lerman, Ph.D., Clinical Psychologist, Los
Angeles Some clients don't respond to a therapist's chosen
treatment for a specific mental disorder. Could there be a physical
disorder that is causing psychiatric symptoms? How can a therapist
distinguish between similar psychiatric and physical disorders to
arrive at the correct diagnosis, refer on, and/or suggest
appropriate treatment? Preventing Misdiagnosis of Women gives the
therapist the foundation for identifying those physiological
disorders that may be at the root of the mental problems presented
by women clients. Hyperthyroidism, for example, can result in
depression and anxiety, and temporal lobe epilepsy can manifest
itself with the same symptoms as bipolar disorder. This special
guidebook sorts out potential mix-ups by providing detailed cases
and illustrations, a quick reference table for checking symptoms,
and a glossary. Making technical information clear and concise, the
authors cover endocrinological--including thyroid, adrenal,
pituitary, and parathyroid systems--and brain seizure problems as
well as other diseases--such as multiple sclerosis, mitral heart
valve prolapse, and lupus erythematosus. They offer a basic
overview of the systems and organs involved and focus on how
particular malfunctions can result in serious behavioral problems.
A guide to providing the best and most effective care to women
clients, Preventing Misdiagnosis of Women presents important
information about assessment and interfacing with medical
professionals. All mental health and helping professionals will
find this book invaluable, as will students in clinical/counseling
psychology, health psychology, social work, and gender studies.
"This book is informative and interesting to read. This is a text
that can be read more than once and be that much more helpful in
subsequent readings. . . . Preventing Misdiagnosis of Women will
certainly have an impact on feminist assessment, theory, and
therapy. In a broader context, it provides a foundation to spawn
research hypotheses on women's health and to reconnect the mind and
body. Written accessibly even for reader without a background in
physiological psychology, it fills a gap in the clinical and
counseling literature. This text has far-reaching implications
about the origin of psychiatric symptoms and possibly for
explaining some differential rates in sex ratios for prevalence of
certain psychologically based clinical syndromes. I found the text
a humbling reminder of how easy it can be to miss the obvious and
how easy it can be to attribute psychological explanations to
symptom clusters one doesn't understand. This book could easily
become a 'required' text for graduate students in mental health
professions and mental health professionals. . . . This text will
undoubtedly have an impact." --Maria P. P. Root, Ph.D., University
of Washington "Preventing Misdiagnosis of Women is very good and
will make an important contribution to the field. . . . The book's
message--that it is critical that differential diagnosis include
consideration of both psychiatric disorders--is convincing and
important to emphasize to students in graduate programs." --Helene
Jackson, Ph.D., The Columbia University School of Social Work
"Preventing Misdiagnosis of Women is a crucial resource for all therapists who treat women. Not only will the information further the well-being of women clients, but it could literally save lives. Interesting, readable, and well-organized, this book belongs on the shelf next to the DSM-IV. The case examples will grip the reader whether professional or lay audience." --Natalie Porter, Ph.D., California School of Professional Psychology "I am greatly impressed with the book. It is a brand new idea, one that is long overdue." --Hannah Lerman, Ph.D., Clinical Psychologist, Los Angeles Some clients don't respond to a therapist's chosen treatment for a specific mental disorder. Could there be a physical disorder that is causing psychiatric symptoms? How can a therapist distinguish between similar psychiatric and physical disorders to arrive at the correct diagnosis, refer on, and/or suggest appropriate treatment? Preventing Misdiagnosis of Women gives the therapist the foundation for identifying those physiological disorders that may be at the root of the mental problems presented by women clients. Hyperthyroidism, for example, can result in depression and anxiety, and temporal lobe epilepsy can manifest itself with the same symptoms as bipolar disorder. This special guidebook sorts out potential mix-ups by providing detailed cases and illustrations, a quick reference table for checking symptoms, and a glossary. Making technical information clear and concise, the authors cover endocrinological--including thyroid, adrenal, pituitary, and parathyroid systems--and brain seizure problems as well as other diseases--such as multiple sclerosis, mitral heart valve prolapse, and lupus erythematosus. They offer a basic overview of the systems and organs involved and focus on how particular malfunctions can result in serious behavioral problems. A guide to providing the best and most effective care to women clients, Preventing Misdiagnosis of Women presents important information about assessment and interfacing with medical professionals. All mental health and helping professionals will find this book invaluable, as will students in clinical/counseling psychology, health psychology, social work, and gender studies. "This book is informative and interesting to read. This is a text that can be read more than once and be that much more helpful in subsequent readings. . . . Preventing Misdiagnosis of Women will certainly have an impact on feminist assessment, theory, and therapy. In a broader context, it provides a foundation to spawn research hypotheses on women's health and to reconnect the mind and body. Written accessibly even for reader without a background in physiological psychology, it fills a gap in the clinical and counseling literature. This text has far-reaching implications about the origin of psychiatric symptoms and possibly for explaining some differential rates in sex ratios for prevalence of certain psychologically based clinical syndromes. I found the text a humbling reminder of how easy it can be to miss the obvious and how easy it can be to attribute psychological explanations to symptom clusters one doesn't understand. This book could easily become a 'required' text for graduate students in mental health professions and mental health professionals. . . . This text will undoubtedly have an impact." --Maria P. P. Root, Ph.D., University of Washington "Preventing Misdiagnosis of Women is very good and will make an important contribution to the field. . . . The book's message--that it is critical that differential diagnosis include consideration of both psychiatric disorders--is convincing and important to emphasize to students in graduate programs." --Helene Jackson, Ph.D., The Columbia University School of Social Work
Should African American be construed as a race or as an ethnic
group? If African Americans are defined as an ethnic group, what
role does culture play in their lives and how can we measure their
culture? This groundbreaking volume argues that we reject the
concept of race and define African Americans as a cultural group.
It presents the first scale ever devised for measuring
acculturation among African Americans, along with powerful studies
that empirically explore the role of culture and acculturation in
African American behavior, health, and psychology. Among the
authors' findings are how acculturation predicts symptoms--such as
depression and anxiety--and physical problems such as hypertension.
Public and mental health researchers and professionals will find
this book an intriguing and useful presentation of an emerging
approach to psychological and health theory and practice. "I found
this volume to be compelling and informative. I believe that this
book will stimulate a great advance in the way we conceptualize
African American psychology in particular and psychology in
general. The authors do an outstanding job of integrating
perspectives from multiple disciplines into a psychological
perspective and then in applying that perspective to their
empirical work. . . . This is a wonderful book and is of great
service to the field." --Hardin L. K. Coleman, Ph.D., Department of
Counseling Psychology, University of Wisconsin
|
You may like...
Tenet
John David Washington, Robert Pattinson, …
DVD
(1)
R51
Discovery Miles 510
|