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Integrated care is receiving a lot of attention from clinicians,
administrators, policy makers, and researchers. Given the current
healthcare crises in the United States, where costs, quality, and
access to care are of particular concern, many are looking for new
and better ways of delivering behavioral health services.
Integrating behavioral health into primary care medical settings
has been shown to: 1) produce healthier patients; 2) produce
medical savings; 3) produce higher patient satisfaction; 4)
leverage the primary care physician s time so that they can be more
productive; and 5) increase physician satisfaction. For these
reasons this is an emerging paradigm with a lot of interest and
momentum. For example, the President s New Freedom Commission on
Mental Health has recently endorsed redesigning the mental health
system so that much of this is integrated into primary care
medicine.
Yet there are few resources to assist all those that are
interested in moving toward integrated care. This has been a major
impediment to more widespread adoption of integrated care. The two
co-editors of this proposed volume have produced some of the key
books in this area: Dr. James (along with co-editor Ray Folen) has
recently produced The Primary Care Consultant which is a good
resource that helps define the unfortunately usually misunderstood
and neglected consultation liaison function of the integrated care
behavioral provider. Dr. O Donohue has co-written a book A Primer
of Integrative Behavioral Care (Prometheus Press, in press) that is
designed to serve as a general introduction to integrated case; as
well as co-edited some more specific titles on medical cost offset,
integrated care and substance abuse, and Behavioral Integrative
Care (2005, Brunner Routledge). Please see our enclosed vitas for
more information.
What these books fail to do is to provide very concrete practice
guidelines and other associated practical tools for the practicing
integrative care behavioral health professional. This book is
designed to fill this important gap. All chapters will be designed
to provide useful materials to understand this quite different mode
of practice. None of the chapters will be academically oriented,
although all information will be evidenced based. As such it will
reach a wide audience and have no direct competitors. We believe
because of the editors profile in this area, the excellent
reputations of the chapter authors, and the practicality of this
book it will sell very well."
This practice-building resource examines the psychology behind
non-adherence and the importance of building commitment to
treatment as the foundation of successful therapy. Coverage starts
by illustrating the complex phenomena of non-adherence at different
stages of intervention-including mechanisms and situations that may
prevent even initial engagement. From there, experts from diverse
specialties offer interest-promoting strategies tailored to
specific conditions (diabetes, anxiety, depression) and populations
(children, dually diagnosed patients), informed by the current
knowledge base on treatment effectiveness and recent technological
advances. And the editors make patient-centered recommendations for
the health and mental health professions to make therapy more
accessible and open. Among the topics covered: * Meeting patients
where they are: using a stage approach to facilitate engagement. *
& nbsp; Use of mindfulness in promoting treatment engagement. *
DBT and treatment engagement in the context of highly suicidal
complex clients. * Behavioral Problems in children: ADHD and ODD. *
Engagement of patients in the self-management of pain. * Engaging
trauma survivors in treatment. A breakthrough in the behavioral
health delivery services literature, Practical Strategies and Tools
to Promote Tre atment Engagement offers real-world tools,
guidelines, and expertise to health psychologists, primary care
physicians and nurses, clinical psychologists, and clinical social
workers. It is a vivid reminder that patients need not only what's
good for them, but also what works for them.
For the past decade, suicidal behavior in military and veteran
populations has been a constant feature in the news and in the
media, with suicide rates among active duty American military
personnel reaching their highest level in almost three decades.
Handbook of Military and Veteran Suicide reviews the most advanced
scientific understanding of the phenomenon of active duty and
veteran suicide, while providing a useful, hands-on clinical guide
for those working with this population. This comprehensive Handbook
covers all relevant topics and current research in suicide in
military and veteran populations, including links between suicide
and PTSD, the stigma of mental health treatment in the military,
screening for firearms access in military and veteran populations,
"subintentioned" suicide (e.g. reckless driving and other such
"accidental" deaths), women in combat, and working with families.
Chapters also cover suicide risk assessment, ethical issues in
treating suicidal patients, evidence-based treatments for PTSD,
traumatic brain injury, and managing suicide in older veterans.
Significant issues that may arise in assessing and treating
military and veteran populations who are at risk for suicide are
presented and discussed with evidence-based and practical
recommendations. This Handbook will benefit researchers, policy
makers, and clinicians who work with active duty military and
veteran populations.
This practice-building resource examines the psychology behind
non-adherence and the importance of building commitment to
treatment as the foundation of successful therapy. Coverage starts
by illustrating the complex phenomena of non-adherence at different
stages of intervention-including mechanisms and situations that may
prevent even initial engagement. From there, experts from diverse
specialties offer interest-promoting strategies tailored to
specific conditions (diabetes, anxiety, depression) and populations
(children, dually diagnosed patients), informed by the current
knowledge base on treatment effectiveness and recent technological
advances. And the editors make patient-centered recommendations for
the health and mental health professions to make therapy more
accessible and open. Among the topics covered: * Meeting patients
where they are: using a stage approach to facilitate engagement. *
& nbsp; Use of mindfulness in promoting treatment engagement. *
DBT and treatment engagement in the context of highly suicidal
complex clients. * Behavioral Problems in children: ADHD and ODD. *
Engagement of patients in the self-management of pain. * Engaging
trauma survivors in treatment. A breakthrough in the behavioral
health delivery services literature, Practical Strategies and Tools
to Promote Tre atment Engagement offers real-world tools,
guidelines, and expertise to health psychologists, primary care
physicians and nurses, clinical psychologists, and clinical social
workers. It is a vivid reminder that patients need not only what's
good for them, but also what works for them.
Environmental, genetic, psychological, and societal factors
interact to produce obesity, a chronic condition of epidemic
proportions. The Handbook of Obesity Intervention for the Lifespan
guides professionals in meeting this complex challenge with a
multidisciplinary palette of evidence-based interventions that can
be tailored to men and women across the lifespan, regardless of
background. This unique reference combines salient research data
and hands-on clinical applications for use with overweight
patients, from the very young to the very old, and includes a
"treatment resources" section with extra materials to bolster
therapy-all geared toward respectful, encouraging treatment and
lasting weight-loss results.
Integrated care is receiving a lot of attention from clinicians,
administrators, policy makers, and researchers. Given the current
healthcare crises in the United States, where costs, quality, and
access to care are of particular concern, many are looking for new
and better ways of delivering behavioral health services.
Integrating behavioral health into primary care medical settings
has been shown to: (1) produce healthier patients; (2) produce
medical savings; (3) produce higher patient satisfaction; (4)
leverage the primary care physician 's time so that they can be
more productive; and (5) increase physician satisfaction. For these
reasons this is an emerging paradigm with a lot of interest and
momentum. For example, the President 's New Freedom Commission on
Mental Health has recently endorsed redesigning the mental health
system so that much of this is integrated into primary care
medicine.
To convey a synopsis of the subject matter is not a simple thing to
achieve, at least for me.The theme of commission in itself is a
topic that implies authority and a chain of command.A commission is
a mandate, a task, an authorization, or even a permit to accomplish
a specific job on behalf of a higher authority. The commission of
the church is a mission that has been given to God's people to
attain as an individual body as well as a corporate body.God's
people must understand what the purpose for their existence really
is. This book embarks on a quest to simplify every aspect of the
purpose and the mission of the body of Christ, answering such
questions as: (1)What is your reasonable service as an individual
in the corporate body of Christ? (2)What does it really mean to be
part of the Church? (3)What is the relationship between the Head
and the body? All of these questions and more will be broken down
to its simplest expression. The human body consist of literally
millions of cells and many organs, the great commission revealed is
on a quest to disclose how as individuals in the body of Christ you
and me make up cells and organs in the body of the anointed.
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