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When care of younger patients raises thorny legal questions, you
need answers you can trust: that's why this book belongs on every
clinician's reference shelf. Principles and Practice of Child and
Adolescent Forensic Mental Health is a timely and authoritative
source that covers issues ranging from child custody to litigation
concerns as it walks clinicians through the often-confusing field
of depositions and courtroom testimony.
The book expands on the 2002 volume Principles and Practice of
Child and Adolescent Forensic Psychiatry winner of the 2003 Manfred
S. Guttmacher Award, to meet pressing twenty-first-century
concerns, from telepsychiatry to the Internet, while continuing to
cover basic issues, such as forensic evaluation, psychological
screening, and the interviewing of children for suspected sexual
abuse, that are important to both new and experienced
practitioners. Many of its chapters have been entirely rewritten by
new authors to provide fresh insight into such topics as child
custody; juvenile law; abuse, neglect, and permanent wardship
cases; transcultural, transracial, and gay/lesbian parenting and
adoption; and the reliability and suggestibility of children's
statements. It also includes significant material not found in the
previous volume: - Two chapters on special education offer an
introduction to screening instruments and help practitioners
determine a child's potential need for special education programs
and services.- A chapter on cultural competence helps readers
improve the accuracy and responsiveness of forensic evaluations and
minimize the chance of an unjust outcome resulting from misguided
expert opinion.- The section on youth violence features three new
chapters -- Taxonomy and Neurobiology of Aggression, Prevention of
School Violence, and Juvenile Stalkers -- plus a newly written
chapter on assessment of violence risk, offering guidance on how to
confront problems such as bullying and initiate effective family
interventions.- A chapter on psychiatric malpractice and
professional liability addresses these legal concerns with an eye
toward cases involving minors.- A chapter on psychological autopsy
covers evaluation of the circumstances surrounding pediatric
suicides, describing various types of equivocal deaths and
discussing legal issues such as admissibility of the autopsy in
court.- A newly written chapter on the Internet expands the
previous book's focus on child pornography to help practitioners
deal with issues ranging from online threats to emotional and legal
consequences of interactions in cyberspace.
This is a valuable reference not only for practitioners in
psychiatry and the mental health field but also for attorneys and
judges. It opens up a field that may be too often avoided and helps
professionals make their way through legal thickets with
confidence.
This book comprehensively educates psychiatrists about malpractice
and other liability. It is written to also specifically assist
psychiatrists who are sued or are involved in other complaints. The
first two sections discuss malpractice law and the litigation
process; the litigation section mainly addresses some of the more
emotionally charged issues, including do's and don'ts, how an
attorney will be looking at the case, the defendant doctor's
testifying at deposition and trial, and the stress of being sued.
The subsequent three sections address specific topics that give
rise to liability, with each section taking a different perspective
such as risks in particular clinical, by practice site, and special
issues, including practice in special situations such as the
current pandemic. The final section discusses other forms of
liability, such as complaints to medical boards or professional
association ethics committees. An exceptional work, Malpractice and
Liability in Psychiatry, functions as both a go-to handbook and
all-encompassing read on the aforementioned topics.
Why do present-day mental health professionals practice the way
that they do? Over the past fifty years, a number of landmark court
holdings have changed such basic principles as what material is
confidential, how civil commitment and involuntary treatment are
conducted, and when a therapist has a duty to protect the public
from a dangerous patient. Unlike most legal texts, this volume
explores these complex principles through the human stories of the
litigants involved.
Why do present-day mental health professionals practice the way
that they do? Over the past fifty years, a number of landmark court
holdings have changed such basic principles as what material is
confidential, how civil commitment and involuntary treatment are
conducted, and when a therapist has a duty to protect the public
from a dangerous patient. Unlike most legal texts, this volume
explores these complex principles through the human stories of the
litigants involved.
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