Tony Thrasher
Emergency Psychiatry
Tony Thrasher
Emergency Psychiatry
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An excellent introduction to the field of emergency mental health issues with a focus on the best approaches and diagnoses one is most likely to encounter in the field. This primer is a phenomenal resource for a myriad of healthcare professionals from the seasoned clinician to medical student looking to better prepare for a clinical rotation or internship.
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An excellent introduction to the field of emergency mental health issues with a focus on the best approaches and diagnoses one is most likely to encounter in the field. This primer is a phenomenal resource for a myriad of healthcare professionals from the seasoned clinician to medical student looking to better prepare for a clinical rotation or internship.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 536
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Juni 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 255mm x 178mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 966g
- ISBN-13: 9780197624005
- ISBN-10: 0197624006
- Artikelnr.: 67522794
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 536
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. Juni 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 255mm x 178mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 966g
- ISBN-13: 9780197624005
- ISBN-10: 0197624006
- Artikelnr.: 67522794
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Dr. Tony Thrasher is a board-certified psychiatrist employed as the medical director for the Crisis Services branch of the Milwaukee County Behavioral Health Division. He received his psychiatric training from Washington University in St. Louis, and he is the current President of the American Association for Emergency Psychiatry (AAEP). He is a Distinguished Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association (APA), and he currently serves as the President Elect for both the Wisconsin Psychiatric Association (WPA) and the Wisconsin Association of Osteopathic Physicians and Surgeons (WAOPS). Additionally, he enjoys teaching as a Clinical Associate Professor with the Medical College of Wisconsin (MCW), serving on the NAMI Wisconsin Board of Directors, and working with Psychiatric Times on a series of Mental Health Minute webinars.
* Section I: The Approach to Emergency Psychiatric Evaluation
* 1. An Initial Approach to the Emergency Evaluation (Pitfalls, Pearls,
and notice of Countertransference)
* 2. Evaluating and Managing the Agitated Patient
* 3. Medical Assessment of the Psychiatric Patient
* 4. Assessing for Suicidality and Overall Risk of Violence
* 5. Telepsychiatry and Beyond: Future Directions in Emergency
Psychiatry
* 6. Cultural Competence in Emergency Psychiatry
* Section II: Specific Disorders, Diagnoses, and Symptoms frequently
encountered as Psychiatric Emergencies
* 1. Altered Mental Status and Neurologic Syndromes
* 2. Intoxication, Withdrawal, and Symptoms of Substance Use Disorders
* 3. Psychosis, Psychotic Disorders, and the Schizophrenia Spectrum
* 4. Emergency Psychiatry Evaluation and Treatment of Mood Disorders
* 5. Anxiety, PTSD, and other Trauma Related Disorders
* 6. Personality Disorders
* 7. Deception in the Emergency Setting: Malingering and Factitious
Disorder
* 8. Eating Disorders and Somatic Symptom Disorders
* Section III: Specific Populations frequently encountered as
Psychiatric Emergencies
* 1. Children and Adolescents
* 2. Geriatrics
* 3. Developmental Disabilities
* 4. Perinatal Patients and related Illnesses, Symptoms, and
Complications related to Pregnancy
* 5. Victims of Physical and Sexual Violence (including identification
and reporting issues)
* Section IV: Disposition, Aftercare, Legal Issues, and Future
Directions
* 1. Tool, Constraint, Liability, Context: Law and Emergency Psychiatry
* 2. Documenting risk assessments and high acuity discharge
presentations
* 3. Trauma Informed Care, Psychological First Aid, and Recovery
Oriented Approaches in the ER
* 4. Collaborations WITHIN the ED: observation units, consult models,
boarding processes, and future directions
* 5. Collaborations BEYOND the ED: mobile crisis teams, peer services,
and working with law enforcement
* 6. Quality Improvement in Psychiatric Emergency Settings: Making Care
Better and Safer
* 1. An Initial Approach to the Emergency Evaluation (Pitfalls, Pearls,
and notice of Countertransference)
* 2. Evaluating and Managing the Agitated Patient
* 3. Medical Assessment of the Psychiatric Patient
* 4. Assessing for Suicidality and Overall Risk of Violence
* 5. Telepsychiatry and Beyond: Future Directions in Emergency
Psychiatry
* 6. Cultural Competence in Emergency Psychiatry
* Section II: Specific Disorders, Diagnoses, and Symptoms frequently
encountered as Psychiatric Emergencies
* 1. Altered Mental Status and Neurologic Syndromes
* 2. Intoxication, Withdrawal, and Symptoms of Substance Use Disorders
* 3. Psychosis, Psychotic Disorders, and the Schizophrenia Spectrum
* 4. Emergency Psychiatry Evaluation and Treatment of Mood Disorders
* 5. Anxiety, PTSD, and other Trauma Related Disorders
* 6. Personality Disorders
* 7. Deception in the Emergency Setting: Malingering and Factitious
Disorder
* 8. Eating Disorders and Somatic Symptom Disorders
* Section III: Specific Populations frequently encountered as
Psychiatric Emergencies
* 1. Children and Adolescents
* 2. Geriatrics
* 3. Developmental Disabilities
* 4. Perinatal Patients and related Illnesses, Symptoms, and
Complications related to Pregnancy
* 5. Victims of Physical and Sexual Violence (including identification
and reporting issues)
* Section IV: Disposition, Aftercare, Legal Issues, and Future
Directions
* 1. Tool, Constraint, Liability, Context: Law and Emergency Psychiatry
* 2. Documenting risk assessments and high acuity discharge
presentations
* 3. Trauma Informed Care, Psychological First Aid, and Recovery
Oriented Approaches in the ER
* 4. Collaborations WITHIN the ED: observation units, consult models,
boarding processes, and future directions
* 5. Collaborations BEYOND the ED: mobile crisis teams, peer services,
and working with law enforcement
* 6. Quality Improvement in Psychiatric Emergency Settings: Making Care
Better and Safer
* Section I: The Approach to Emergency Psychiatric Evaluation
* 1. An Initial Approach to the Emergency Evaluation (Pitfalls, Pearls,
and notice of Countertransference)
* 2. Evaluating and Managing the Agitated Patient
* 3. Medical Assessment of the Psychiatric Patient
* 4. Assessing for Suicidality and Overall Risk of Violence
* 5. Telepsychiatry and Beyond: Future Directions in Emergency
Psychiatry
* 6. Cultural Competence in Emergency Psychiatry
* Section II: Specific Disorders, Diagnoses, and Symptoms frequently
encountered as Psychiatric Emergencies
* 1. Altered Mental Status and Neurologic Syndromes
* 2. Intoxication, Withdrawal, and Symptoms of Substance Use Disorders
* 3. Psychosis, Psychotic Disorders, and the Schizophrenia Spectrum
* 4. Emergency Psychiatry Evaluation and Treatment of Mood Disorders
* 5. Anxiety, PTSD, and other Trauma Related Disorders
* 6. Personality Disorders
* 7. Deception in the Emergency Setting: Malingering and Factitious
Disorder
* 8. Eating Disorders and Somatic Symptom Disorders
* Section III: Specific Populations frequently encountered as
Psychiatric Emergencies
* 1. Children and Adolescents
* 2. Geriatrics
* 3. Developmental Disabilities
* 4. Perinatal Patients and related Illnesses, Symptoms, and
Complications related to Pregnancy
* 5. Victims of Physical and Sexual Violence (including identification
and reporting issues)
* Section IV: Disposition, Aftercare, Legal Issues, and Future
Directions
* 1. Tool, Constraint, Liability, Context: Law and Emergency Psychiatry
* 2. Documenting risk assessments and high acuity discharge
presentations
* 3. Trauma Informed Care, Psychological First Aid, and Recovery
Oriented Approaches in the ER
* 4. Collaborations WITHIN the ED: observation units, consult models,
boarding processes, and future directions
* 5. Collaborations BEYOND the ED: mobile crisis teams, peer services,
and working with law enforcement
* 6. Quality Improvement in Psychiatric Emergency Settings: Making Care
Better and Safer
* 1. An Initial Approach to the Emergency Evaluation (Pitfalls, Pearls,
and notice of Countertransference)
* 2. Evaluating and Managing the Agitated Patient
* 3. Medical Assessment of the Psychiatric Patient
* 4. Assessing for Suicidality and Overall Risk of Violence
* 5. Telepsychiatry and Beyond: Future Directions in Emergency
Psychiatry
* 6. Cultural Competence in Emergency Psychiatry
* Section II: Specific Disorders, Diagnoses, and Symptoms frequently
encountered as Psychiatric Emergencies
* 1. Altered Mental Status and Neurologic Syndromes
* 2. Intoxication, Withdrawal, and Symptoms of Substance Use Disorders
* 3. Psychosis, Psychotic Disorders, and the Schizophrenia Spectrum
* 4. Emergency Psychiatry Evaluation and Treatment of Mood Disorders
* 5. Anxiety, PTSD, and other Trauma Related Disorders
* 6. Personality Disorders
* 7. Deception in the Emergency Setting: Malingering and Factitious
Disorder
* 8. Eating Disorders and Somatic Symptom Disorders
* Section III: Specific Populations frequently encountered as
Psychiatric Emergencies
* 1. Children and Adolescents
* 2. Geriatrics
* 3. Developmental Disabilities
* 4. Perinatal Patients and related Illnesses, Symptoms, and
Complications related to Pregnancy
* 5. Victims of Physical and Sexual Violence (including identification
and reporting issues)
* Section IV: Disposition, Aftercare, Legal Issues, and Future
Directions
* 1. Tool, Constraint, Liability, Context: Law and Emergency Psychiatry
* 2. Documenting risk assessments and high acuity discharge
presentations
* 3. Trauma Informed Care, Psychological First Aid, and Recovery
Oriented Approaches in the ER
* 4. Collaborations WITHIN the ED: observation units, consult models,
boarding processes, and future directions
* 5. Collaborations BEYOND the ED: mobile crisis teams, peer services,
and working with law enforcement
* 6. Quality Improvement in Psychiatric Emergency Settings: Making Care
Better and Safer