Sims' symptoms in the mind : textbook of descriptive psychopathology
Oyebode, Femi 1954-
7th edition
2022
1 ressource en ligne : illustrations (principalement en couleur)
Format PDF
9780702085260
Anglais
1. Fundamental Concepts of Descriptive Psychopathology -- 2. Eliciting the Symptoms of Mental Illness -- 3. Consciousness and Disturbed Consciousness -- 4. Attention, Concentration, Orientation and Sleep -- 5. Disturbance of Memory -- 6. Disorder of Time -- 7. Pathology of Perception -- 8. Delusions and Other Erroneous Ideas -- 9. Disorder of the Thinking Process -- 10. Disorder of Speech and Language -- 11. Insight -- 12. The Disordered Self -- 13. Depersonalization -- 14. Disorder of the Awareness of the Body -- 15. The Psychopathology of Pain -- 16. Affect and Emotional Disorders -- 17. Anxiety, Panic, Irritability, Phobia and Obsession -- 18. Disorders of Volition and Execution -- 19. Disorder of Aesthetic Perception and Praxis -- 20. The Expression of Disordered Personality -- 21. Psychopathology and Diagnosis
" Psychopathology – the study of abnormal mental states – is a foundational discipline of psychiatry that is formidable to master. Since 1988, Sims' Symptoms in the Mind has been the leading introductory textbook in this area and provides the conceptual backbone needed by every psychiatrist in training. It defines and explains the main symptoms and syndromes of mental illness encountered in clinical practice. Now in its seventh edition, the text has been fully revised and updated by renowned psychiatry professor Femi Oyebode. It provides a masterful introduction to this difficult area that will challenge the reader intellectually, while at the same time supporting his or her learning. With a combination of accessible text and audiovisual materials in the online ebook, this is the standard postgraduate text for psychiatric trainees as well as a valued reference for academics, clinical psychiatrists and psychologists, allied health professionals, and researchers."-- Publisher
Maladies mentales / Psychopathologie