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Oxford Textbook of Old Age Psychiatry

BuchGebunden
960 Seiten
Englisch
Oxford University Presserschienen am26.11.20203rd edition
Part of the authoritative Oxford Textbooks in Psychiatry series, Oxford Textbook of Old Age Psychiatry, Third Edition has been thoroughly updated to reflect the developments in old age psychiatry since publication of the Second Edition in 2013, and remains an essential reference for anyone interested in the mental health care of older people.mehr
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BuchGebunden
EUR206,50
E-BookEPUBDRM AdobeE-Book
EUR126,99
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EUR126,99

Produkt

KlappentextPart of the authoritative Oxford Textbooks in Psychiatry series, Oxford Textbook of Old Age Psychiatry, Third Edition has been thoroughly updated to reflect the developments in old age psychiatry since publication of the Second Edition in 2013, and remains an essential reference for anyone interested in the mental health care of older people.
Details
ISBN/GTIN978-0-19-880729-2
ProduktartBuch
EinbandartGebunden
FormatGenäht
Erscheinungsjahr2020
Erscheinungsdatum26.11.2020
Auflage3rd edition
Seiten960 Seiten
SpracheEnglisch
MasseBreite 225 mm, Höhe 280 mm, Dicke 51 mm
Gewicht2874 g
Artikel-Nr.56872149
Rubriken
GenreMedizin

Inhalt/Kritik

Inhaltsverzeichnis
1: Doug Gray, Carole Proctor, and Tom Kirkwood: Biological aspects of human ageing2: John Woulfe, Doug Gray, and Carole Proctor: The ageing brain3: Ricca Edmondson: Sociology of ageing4: Thais Minett, Blossom CM Stephan, and Carol Brayne: Epidemiology5: Johannes Attems and Kurt Jellinger: Neuropathology6: Andrea Vergallo, Harald Hampel, René S. Bun, and Simone Lista: Biomarkers in Alzheimer's disease7: Robert Barber: Clinical biomarkers in the diagnosis of dementia8: Abdul Hye and Latha Velayudhan: Molecular genetics/molecular biology9: Jonathan Huntley, Alan Thomas, and Robert Stewart: Psychiatric assessment of older people10: Sean O'Dowd: Clinical cognitive assessment11: Rowan H. Harwood and Rachel Cowan: Physical assessment12: Sana Suri, Vyara Valkanova, Verena Heise, Claire E. Sexton, and Klaus P. Ebmeier: Neuroimaging13: Delia Bishara: Psychopharmacology14: Daniel W. O'Connor, Christos Plakiotis, and Peter Farnbach: Neurostimulation therapies15: John Keady and Mike Nolan: Person- and Relationship- centred care16: Philip Wilkinson and Ken Laidlaw: Psychological treatments: introduction17: Ken Laidlaw and Philip Wilkinson: Cognitive behaviour therapy18: Philip Wilkinson and Ken Laidlaw: Interpersonal therapy19: Ian A. James and Alan Howarth: Non pharmacological interventions in care homes20: Tom Dening and Kuruvilla George: Principles of service provision21: K. S. Jacob and Cleusa P. Ferri: Old age psychiatry in low and middle income countries22: Louise Robinson and Caroline A. Chew-Graham: Primary care management of older people's mental health problems23: Sube Banerjee and Nicolas Farina: Memory assessment services24: Fiona Thompson and Elena Baker-Glenn: Liaison old age psychiatry25: Jo Moriarty: Social care26: Tom Dening and Alisoun Milne: Care homes27: Elizabeth Sampson and Karen Harrison Dening: Palliative care and end of life care28: Tom Dening: The experience of dementia28a: Keith Oliver: Getting a diagnosis28b: Louise Lafortune and Carol Brayne: Screening v early diagnosis28c: Hilary Doxford: Post diagnosis28d: June Hennell: The end of the journey and life after dementia29: Deepti Marchment and Dennis Chan: MCI and predementia syndromes30: John-Paul Taylor and Benjamin R. Underwood: Alzheimer's disease31: Robert Stewart: Vascular and mixed dementia32: Arvid Rongve and Dag Aarsland: The lewy body dementias: Dementia with lewy bodies and Parkinson s disease dementia33: Martina Bocchetta and Jonathan D Rohrer: Frontotemporal dementia34: Andrew Graham: Neurological dementias35: Roy W. Jones: Pharmacological treatments36: Sarah Cullum and Tesema Taye: Management of dementia37: Daniel Davis, Elizabeth Teale, and Rowan H. Harwood: Delirium38: Anonymous: The experience of depression39: Alan Thomas: Depressive disorders40: Helen F.K. Chiu, Baoliang Zhong, and Joshua Tsoh: Suicide and self harm41: Lauren Mussen and Akshya Vasudev: Manic syndromes42: Gerard Byrne: Anxiety disorders43: Ellen E. Lee, Baichun Hou, Ipsit V. Vahia, and Dilip V. Jeste: Late onset schizophrenia44: Julie Gosling: Personal experience: The red and the reason45: Catherine Hatfield and Tom Dening: Severe and enduring mental illness46: Tony Rao and Katy A. Jones: Alcohol and substance misuse47: Maria Luisa Hanney, Stephen Tyrer, and Brian Moore: Older people with intellectual disabilities48: Kirstie Anderson, Zheyu Xu, Urs Mosimann, and Bradley Boeve: Sleep disorders49: Bob Woods and Gill Windle: The effect of ageing on personality50: Sharron Hinchliff and Bianca Fileborn: Sexuality in old age51: Julian C. Hughes: Ethics and old age psychiatry52: Charlotte Emmett and Julian C. Hughes: Mental capacity and decision making53: Cees Hertogh, Marike de Boer, and Simone Hendriks: Ethics of living and dying with dementia54: Jan Oyebode and Sahdia Parveen: Carers55: Jill Manthorpe: Elder abuse and safeguarding vulnerable adults56: Claudio Di Lorito and Birgit Völlm: Older people as victims and perpetrators of crime57: Desmond O'Neill and Mark J. Rapoport: Driving and psychiatric illness in later life58: Kay Wheat: The law relating to mental capacity and mental healthmehr

Autor

Tom Dening is Professor of Dementia Research in the Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences and Head of the Centre for Dementia in the Institute of Mental Health at the University of Nottingham, UK. Prof. Dening studied Medicine at Newcastle University and trained in Psychiatry in Cambridge and Oxford. His interests include the epidemiology of mental disorders in older people, treatment of dementia and depression in older people, psychiatric services and other clinical topics. He has also published papers on neuropsychiatry, psychiatric symptoms and the history of psychiatry.


Alan Thomas is Professor of Old Age Psychiatry at Newcastle University and Honorary Consultant in Old Age Psychiatry at Gateshead Health NHS Foundation Trust. His research interests are clinical studies in dementia with Lewy bodies, the neuropathology of late-life depression, and wider dementia research. Professor Thomas is also the Clinical Director of the Newcastle Human Brain Tissue Resource at Newcastle University and Director of Brains for Dementia Research.


Robert Stewart is Professor of Psychiatric Epidemiology and Clinical Informatics at King's College London. He has a particular interest in the nexus point of physical and mental health and leads the Clinical and Population Informatics theme of the SLAM Biomedical Research Centre for Mental Health. Since its inception in 2007, Professor Stewart has served as the academic lead for the Clinical Record Interactive Search (CRIS).

John-Paul Taylor is Professor of Translational Dementia Research with the Institute of Neuroscience at Newcastle University and an Honorary Consultant in Old Age Psychiatry with the Northumberland, Tyne and Wear (NTW) NHS Trust. His research focuses on the application of neuroimaging and neurophysiological approaches in understanding symptom aetiology in Lewy body dementia. Professor Taylor also leads a specialist Lewy body dementia clinic in Newcastle and works in the local memory clinic.