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Psychologist Prescriptive Privileges
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Psychologist Prescriptive Privileges
1 .
Drugs, Therapy, and Professional Power: Problems and Pills (Chap. 7 "Should Psychologists Prescribe?")
by Ernest Keen. 234 pgs.
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Title Page
Copyright Acknowledgments
Contents
Illustrations
Preface
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Part I: Psychiatry's Struggle with Medication
1: Lobotomy and Psychopharmacology: A Comparative Study
2: The Early Years of Psychopharmacology, 1950-1980
3: From Pharmacizing to Corporatizing Psychiatry: The 1980s and 1990s
4: Deinstitutionalization: Science and Policy
Conclusion
Part II: Some Good Questions
5: Are Pharmacology and Psychotherapy Compatible?
Conclusion
6: Is the Psychology of Pharmacotherapy the Active Ingredient?
7: Should Psychologists Prescribe?
Part III: Power and Healing in the Postmodern World
8: Psychiatric Power and Its Concealment
Conclusion
9: Cultural Dilemmas
10: Mental Healing in the Postmodern Age
References
Suggested Further Reading
Index
About the Author
2 .
Your Drug May Be Your Problem: How and Why to Stop Taking Psychiatric Drugs (Chap. 12 "Guidelines for Therapists Who Do Not Advocate the Use of Psychiatric Drugs")
by Peter R. Breggin, David Cohen. 272 pgs.
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Title Page
Contents
A Warning concerning the Use of Psychiatric Drugs
Introduction: What Is Your Ultimate Resource?
1: Psychiatric Drugs-- Much Easier to Start Than to Stop
2: The Limits of Psychiatric Drugs
3: Your Drug May Be Your Problem-- but You May Be the Last to Know
4: Adverse Effects of Specific Psychiatric Drugs
5: Personal and Psychological Reasons for Not Using Psychiatric Drugs
6: Why Doctors Tell Their Patients So Little
7: Plan Your Drug Withdrawal
8: How to Stop Taking Psychiatric Drugs
9: Withdrawal Reactions from Psychiatric Drugs
10: Withdrawing Your Child from Psychiatric Drugs
11: Understanding Your Therapist's Fears about Nonuse of Drugs
12: Guidelines for Therapists Who Do Not Advocate the Use of Psychiatric Drugs
13: Psychological Principles for Helping Yourself and Others without Resort to Psychiatric Medications
Appendix A: Books for Further Information
Appendix B: How to Contact the Authors
Appendix C: The International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Ethical Human Sciences and Services: An International Journal of Critical Inquiry
3 .
Mental Health Counselors' Perceptions Regarding Psychopharmacological Prescriptive Privileges, in Journal of Mental Health Counseling
by Kari A. Scovel, Orla J. Christensen, Joan T. England. 15 pgs.
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4 .
Children and Psychotropic Medication: What Role Should Advocacy Counseling Play?, in Journal of Counseling and Development
by R. Elliott Ingersoll, Ann Bauer, Laura Burns. 6 pgs.
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5 .
Teaching a Psychopharmacology Course to Counselors: Justification, Structure, and Methods, in Counselor Education and Supervision
by R. Elliott Ingersoll. 12 pgs.
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6 .
Psychopharmacology for Advanced Practice Psychiatric Nurses Conference, Philadelphia, October 25-27, 2002, in Perspectives in Psychiatric Care
by Mary Paquette. 2 pgs.
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7 .
Unanticipated Psychotropic Medication Reactions, in Journal of Mental Health Counseling
by H. Gray Otis, Jason H. King. 22 pgs.
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8 .
Issues in Philosophical Counseling (Chap. 11 "Medicating the Mind")
by Peter B. Raabe. 249 pgs.
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Title Page
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Man Who Saved the World but Could Not Save Himself
Chapter 2: Philosophical Counseling in Brief
Chapter 3: Experimental Philosophy
Chapter 4: Clinical Philosophy
Chapter 5: Counseling and the Café
Chapter 6: E-Mail Counseling
Chapter 7: Sex and Logic
Notes
Chapter 8: Speaking like a Woman/Listening like a Man
Chapter 9: Rational Passions
Chapter 10: All Seriousness Aside
Chapter 11: Medicating the Mind
Chapter 12: Medicating the Mind: a Second Dose
Chapter 13: Getting to Normal
Notes
Chapter 14: Celebrating Affliction
Notes
Chapter 15: The Meaning of Life
Chapter 16: Learning to Be Old
Chapter 17: Suicide as Self-Defense
Chapter 18: What Does God Have to Do with It?
Chapter 19: Dream Interpretation
Notes
Chapter 20: Duty to Oneself
Chapter 21: The Independent Philosopher
Selected Bibliography
Index
About the Author
9 .
Mental Disorders, Medications and Clinical Social Work (Chap. 12 "Psychotropic Medications")
by Sonia G. Austrian. 356 pgs.
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Title Page
Contents
Acknowledgments
Preface
Mental Disorders, Medications, and Clinical Social Work
1: Introduction
2: Anxiety Disorders
3: Mood Disorders
4: Somatoform and Factitious Disorders
5: Dissociative Disorders
6: Schizophrenia
7: Substance-Related Disorders
8: Eating Disorders
9: Personality Disorders
10: Delirium, Dementia, and Amnestic and Other Cognitive Disorders
11: Psychological and Neuropsychological Assessment
12: Psychotropic Medications
Epilogue
Glossary
References and Additional Readings
Subject Index
Author Index
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