Mental Health Uncertainty and Inevitability [electronic resource] : Rejuvenating the Relationship between Social Science and Psychiatry / edited by Hugh Middleton, Melanie Jordan.

Contributor(s): Middleton, Hugh [editor.] | Jordan, Melanie [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017Description: XIII, 242 p. 2 illus. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783319439709Subject(s): Psychology | Psychiatry | Social medicine | Health psychology | Experiential research | Psychology | Psychology Research | Psychiatry | Health Psychology | Medical SociologyAdditional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification: 150.72 LOC classification: BF76.5Online resources: e-book Full-text access
Contents:
Chapter 1: Returning to the Fray: Revisiting what Social Science Can Offer Psychiatry ... and vice versa -- Chapter 2: A Symbolic Interactionist Approach to Mental Health Assertive Outreach -- Chapter 3: The Role of Everyday Interaction Rituals within Therapeutic Communities -- Chapter 4: The Dementia Experience: Sociological Observations on the Construction of Cognition in Care Homes Kezia Scales -- Chapter 5: "The will's there and the skill's there": Prison Mental Healthcare -- Chapter 6: Institutional and Emotion Work in Forensic Psychiatry: Detachment and Desensitisation -- Chapter 7: Community Mental Health Teams: Interacting Groups of Citizen-Agent? -- Chapter 8: Handling Role Boundaries: A Basic Social Process underpinning decision making in mental health teams -- Chapter 9: Mental Health Uncertainty & Inevitability.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book offers original knowledge, debate, and understanding from frontline fieldwork data and the relations between mental health difficulties, mental healthcare provision, and social theory. Dominant discourse of the last half century has followed a medical perspective. This has marginalised contributions from social science. Furthermore purely medical approaches to mental healthcare have profound shortcomings. Thus, this book draws upon innovative research findings to rejuvenate the relationship between psychiatry and social science. It frames this by reference to certain inevitable and uncertain elements of mental health which characterise this field. Over nine chapters the volume is a unique contribution to several intersecting areas of intellectual enterprise, research, and learning - as well as a source of insight into how mental health practice and policy might be modified and improved. As a result, it appeals to a wide range of audiences including social scientists, mental health practitioners, mental health researchers, social theorists, mental health service users, and policy-makers.

Chapter 1: Returning to the Fray: Revisiting what Social Science Can Offer Psychiatry ... and vice versa -- Chapter 2: A Symbolic Interactionist Approach to Mental Health Assertive Outreach -- Chapter 3: The Role of Everyday Interaction Rituals within Therapeutic Communities -- Chapter 4: The Dementia Experience: Sociological Observations on the Construction of Cognition in Care Homes Kezia Scales -- Chapter 5: "The will's there and the skill's there": Prison Mental Healthcare -- Chapter 6: Institutional and Emotion Work in Forensic Psychiatry: Detachment and Desensitisation -- Chapter 7: Community Mental Health Teams: Interacting Groups of Citizen-Agent? -- Chapter 8: Handling Role Boundaries: A Basic Social Process underpinning decision making in mental health teams -- Chapter 9: Mental Health Uncertainty & Inevitability.

This book offers original knowledge, debate, and understanding from frontline fieldwork data and the relations between mental health difficulties, mental healthcare provision, and social theory. Dominant discourse of the last half century has followed a medical perspective. This has marginalised contributions from social science. Furthermore purely medical approaches to mental healthcare have profound shortcomings. Thus, this book draws upon innovative research findings to rejuvenate the relationship between psychiatry and social science. It frames this by reference to certain inevitable and uncertain elements of mental health which characterise this field. Over nine chapters the volume is a unique contribution to several intersecting areas of intellectual enterprise, research, and learning - as well as a source of insight into how mental health practice and policy might be modified and improved. As a result, it appeals to a wide range of audiences including social scientists, mental health practitioners, mental health researchers, social theorists, mental health service users, and policy-makers.

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