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Families are riddled with untold secrets. But Stephen Hinshaw never
imagined that a profound secret was kept under lock and key for 18
years within his family - that his father's mysterious absences,
for months at a time, resulted from serious mental illness and
involuntary hospitalisations. From the moment his father revealed
the truth, during Hinshaw's first spring break from college, he
knew his life would change forever. Hinshaw calls this revelation
his 'psychological birth.' After years of experiencing the ups and
downs of his father's illness without knowing it existed, Hinshaw
began to piece together the silent, often terrifying history of his
father's life - in great contrast to his father's presence and love
during periods of wellness. This exploration led to larger
discoveries about the family saga, to Hinshaw's correctly
diagnosing his father with bipolar disorder, and to his
full-fledged career as a clinical and developmental psychologist
and professor. In Another Kind of Madness, Hinshaw explores the
burden of living in a family 'loaded' with mental illness and
debunks the stigma behind it. He explains that in today's society,
mental health problems still receive utter castigation - too often
resulting in the loss of fundamental rights, including the
inability to vote or run for office or automatic relinquishment of
child custody. Through a poignant and moving family narrative,
interlaced with shocking facts about how America and the world
still view mental health conditions well into in the 21st century,
Another Kind of Madness is a passionate call to arms regarding the
importance of destigmatising mental illness.
*A needed guide from the preeminent expert on ADHD in girls.
*Empathic, realistic advice based on the latest research and
clinical advances. *Addresses how ADHD may look different in girls,
how it affects their self-worth (especially for teens), and what
treatments work best. *Provides parenting suggestions tailored for
girls of different ages. *ADHD is not just a boys' problem--helps
parents separate facts from myth and get an accurate diagnosis.
Millions of people and their families are affected by mental
illness; it causes untold pain and severely impairs their ability
to function in the world. In recent years, we have begun to
understand and develop a range of effective treatments for mental
illness. Even with this shift from moralistic views to those
emphasizing the biological and genetic origins of mental illness,
punitive treatment and outright rejection remain strong. Public
attitudes toward mental illness are still more negative than they
were half a century ago, and the majority of those afflicted either
do not receive or cannot afford adequate care. As a result of all
of these troubling facts, applying the term "stigma" to mental
illness is particularly appropriate because stigma conveys the mark
of shame borne by those in any highly devalued group.
Mental illness tops the list of stigmatized conditions in current
society, generating the kinds of stereotypes, fear, and rejection
that are reminiscent of longstanding attitudes toward leprosy.
Mental disorders threaten stability and order, and media coverage
exacerbates this situation by equating mental illness with
violence. As a result, stigma is rampant, spurring family silence,
discriminatory laws, and social isolation. The pain of mental
illness is searing enough, but adding the layer of stigma affects
personal well being, economic productivity, and public health,
fueling a vicious cycle of lowered expectations, deep shame, and
hopelessness.
In this groundbreaking book, Stephen Hinshaw examines the
longstanding tendency to stigmatize those with mental illness. He
also provides practical strategies for overcoming this serious
problem, including enlightenedsocial policies that encourage,
rather than discourage, contact with those afflicted, media
coverage emphasizing their underlying humanity, family education,
and responsive treatment.
Stigma is a deeply inspiring and passionate work that is realistic
and filled with hope. It combines personal accounts with
information from social and evolutionary psychology, sociology, and
public policy to provide messages that are essential for anyone
afflicted or familiar with mental illness.
Rates of diagnosis of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD) are skyrocketing, throughout America and the rest of the
world. U.S. rates of youth diagnosis have increased 40% from just a
decade ago. Adults with ADHD are now the fastest-growing segment of
the population receiving diagnosis and medication. The disorder is
painful and sometimes disabling for individuals and tremendously
costly for society; yet, widespread misinformation, skepticism, and
unanswered questions have jeopardized effective diagnosis and
treatment. Researched and written by Stephen Hinshaw, an
international expert on ADHD, and Katherine Ellison, a
Pulitzer-Prize winning journalist and author, ADHD: What Everyone
Needs to Know is the go-to book for authoritative, current,
accurate, and compelling information about the global ADHD
epidemic. This book addresses questions such as: * Is ADHD a
genuine medical condition or a means of pathologizing active and
exploratory behavior? * Do medications for ADHD serve as needed
treatments, or are they attempts at social control, designed to
bolster profits of pharmaceutical firms? * Has the ADHD label
become a ruse by which parents can game the educational system for
accommodations? * How do symptoms and impairments related to ADHD
differ between girls and women and boys and men? * Why are ADHD
medications often used as performance enhancers by college and
high-school students? ADHD: What Everyone Needs to Know (R) clears
the air of the most polarizing and misleading information that
abounds, providing straight talk and sound guidelines for
educators, policymakers, health professionals, parents, and the
general public. It shows the reality of ADHD but does not ignore
the forces that have pushed up rates of diagnosis to alarmingly
high levels.
Millions of people and their families are affected by mental
illness; it causes untold pain and severely impairs their ability
to function in the world. In recent years, we have begun to
understand and develop a range of effective treatments for mental
illness. Even with this shift from moralistic views to those
emphasizing the biological and genetic origins of mental illness,
punitive treatment and outright rejection remain strong. Public
attitudes toward mental illness are still more negative than they
were half a century ago, and the majority of those afflicted either
do not receive or cannot afford adequate care. As a result of all
of these troubling facts, applying the term "stigma" to mental
illness is particularly appropriate because stigma conveys the mark
of shame borne by those in any highly devalued group.
Mental illness tops the list of stigmatized conditions in current
society, generating the kinds of stereotypes, fear, and rejection
that are reminiscent of longstanding attitudes toward leprosy.
Mental disorders threaten stability and order, and media coverage
exacerbates this situation by equating mental illness with
violence. As a result, stigma is rampant, spurring family silence,
discriminatory laws, and social isolation. The pain of mental
illness is searing enough, but adding the layer of stigma affects
personal well being, economic productivity, and public health,
fueling a vicious cycle of lowered expectations, deep shame, and
hopelessness.
In this groundbreaking book, Stephen Hinshaw examines the
longstanding tendency to stigmatize those with mental illness. He
also provides practical strategies for overcoming this serious
problem, including enlightened social policies that encourage,
rather than discourage, contact with those afflicted, media
coverage emphasizing their underlying humanity, family education,
and responsive treatment.
The Mark of Shame is a deeply inspiring and passionate work that is
realistic and filled with hope. It combines personal accounts with
information from social and evolutionary psychology, sociology, and
public policy to provide messages that are essential for anyone
afflicted or familiar with mental illness.
Recent developments in the conceptualization of externalizing
spectrum disorders, including attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder, conduct disorder, antisocial personality disorder, and
substance use disorders, suggest common genetic and neural
substrates. Despite this, neither shared vulnerabilities nor their
implications for developmental models of externalizing conduct are
captured by prevailing nosologic and diagnostic systems, such as
the DSM-5. The Oxford Handbook of Externalizing Spectrum Disorders
is the first book of its kind to capture the developmental
psychopathology of externalizing spectrum disorders by examining
causal factors across levels of analysis and developmental epochs,
while departing from the categorical perspective. World renowned
experts on externalizing psychopathology demonstrate how shared
genetic and neural vulnerabilities predispose to trait impulsivity,
a highly heritable personality construct that is often shaped by
adverse environments into increasingly intractable forms of
externalizing conduct across development. Consistent with
contemporary models of almost all forms of psychopathology, the
Handbook emphasizes the importance of neurobiological vulnerability
and environmental risk interactions in the expression of
externalizing behavior across the lifespan. The volume concludes
with an integrative, ontogenic process model of externalizing
psychopathology in which diverse equifinal and multifinal pathways
to disorder are specified.
Another winner in Sage's Developmental Clinical Psychology and
Psychiatry Series, this time by a University of California,
Berkeley psychologist. . . . Stephen P. Hinshaw's chief goals are
to provide adequate background information and to evaluate certain
key debates and core questions that remain unacceptably answered at
the present time. . . . He has managed to convey in accurate and
readable fashion a remarkable amount of information in a relatively
short space. Advances, challenges, and unresolved problems in
diverse but relevant areas are meticulously analyzed and placed in
context. As the comprehensive and well-chosen reference list bears
testimony, the book is enriched by the fact that the author's own
work plays an important role in elaborating many of the key
features of this still little understood but very prevalent
disorder. This book will be of value to students, trainees, and
professionals in both academic disciplines and more clinical areas.
--Child & Family Behavior Therapy Children diagnosed with
attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) often have major
difficulties with achievement in school, and they often exhibit
defiance, aggression, and other antisocial behaviors. Although
there is abundant literature on ADHD, misinformation abounds.
Serving to synthesize findings from the vast and often confusing
array of information on this subject, Attention Deficits and
Hyperactivity in Children provides concrete information regarding
basic clinical, conceptual, diagnostic, etiologic, and
treatment-related issues on ADHD. This volume illustrates and
evaluates several key debates that have confronted the field for
many years: Is there a valid syndrome characterized by attention
deficits and/or hyperactivity? What tools can assessors use to gain
optimal information about the disorder? Has the field achieved
consensus with respect to the nature or underlying mechanisms of
the behavioral difficulties these children display? Which factors
predict subsequent functioning in adolescence and adulthood? Due to
the great diversity of characteristics and causal influences
related to ADHD, the author considers many perspectives including
clinical, developmental, psychodiagnostic, psychobiologic,
environmental/familial, and social cognitive viewpoints.
*A needed guide from the preeminent expert on ADHD in girls.
*Empathic, realistic advice based on the latest research and
clinical advances. *Addresses how ADHD may look different in girls,
how it affects their self-worth (especially for teens), and what
treatments work best. *Provides parenting suggestions tailored for
girls of different ages. *ADHD is not just a boys' problem--helps
parents separate facts from myth and get an accurate diagnosis.
People with mental illness are often stigmatized, both in the U.S.
and around the world. Paradoxically, many in the mental health
professions are themselves the source of a great deal of such
stigma. Theoretical models in psychology and psychiatry have often
blamed family members for causing mental illness, and too many
practitioners and scientists hold to "us versus them" attitudes,
showing extreme reluctance to admit personal and family experiences
of mental illness. In this book, mental health professionals and
scientists, ranging from newly trained individuals to seasoned
clinicians and researchers, tell their own and their families'
stories of mental disorder, providing an unprecedented level of
honesty and disclosure. The volume presents moving and inspiring
narratives of serious mental disorder in individuals who have
decided to focus their careers on mental illness in others. The
editor, who has previously disclosed his own family's struggles
with his father's lifelong, misdiagnosed bipolar disorder, utilizes
his own experiences to integrate, synthesize, and provide
perspective on these revealing contributions. Through both personal
narratives and accounts of parents, siblings, or offspring, the
contributors convey the serious impairments that can accrue to
those with mental illness, the strength and courage that emanate
from such experiences, and the ways in which these experiences have
contributed to their own decisions to enter the mental health
field. Providing a humanizing portrayal of mental disorder, this
volume will be indispensable reading for those in the mental health
professions, trainees across many related fields, family members,
persons contending with mental illness, and all those who wish to
know more about the effects of mental illness on our society. Its
stark stories of pain and impairment, and its clear messages of
hope and courage, will inspire those working in the mental health
professions, as well as their clients, for years to come.
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