Search Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »
My library | Help | Advanced Book Search | Web History | Sign in

Books

Lecture Notes: Psychiatry

Front Cover
0 Reviews
John Wiley & Sons, Nov 15, 2011 - Medical - 240 pages
Unsure how to 'do' psychiatry?

Wondering what psychiatry is all about?

Want just the key facts?

Lecture Notes: Psychiatry provides essential, practical, and up-to-date information for students who are learning to conduct psychiatric interviews and assessments, understand the core psychiatric disorders, their aetiology and evidence-based treatment options.

It incorporates the latest NICE guidelines and systematic reviews, and includes coverage of the Mental Capacity Act and the new Mental Health Act. Featuring case studies throughout, it is perfect for clinical preparation with example questions to ask patients during clinical rotations.

Each chapter features bulleted key points, while the summary boxes and self-test MCQs ensure Lecture Notes: Psychiatry is the ideal resource, whether you are just beginning to develop psychiatric knowledge and skills or preparing for an end-of-year exam.

  

What people are saying - Write a review

We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.

Related books

Contents

The core psychiatric assessment
Psychiatric assessment modules
harm selfharm and suicide
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Organic psychiatric disorders
Substance misuse
Personality disorders
Learning disability mental retardation
Chapter 17
Psychiatry in other settings
Multiple choice questions
Answers to multiple choice questions
ICD10 classification of psychiatric
Chapter 18
Index

Childhood disorders
Chapter 16

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2011)

Professor Paul Harrison, FRC Psych, Professor Paul Geddes, FRC Psych, and Dr Michael Sharpe, MRC Psych, are all experienced teachers in psychiatry and psychological medicine. Professors Harrison and Geddes are both based at the Warneford Hospital in Oxford where they teach the psychiatry attachment for medical students at Oxford University, and Dr Sharpe is Reader in Psychological Medicine at the University of Edinburgh.

Bibliographic information