Empathy in Clinical Psychiatry and Mental Health Care focuses on empathy in clinical psychiatry and mental health care, bringing together the challenging reality of day-to-day clinical mental health work with conceptual and neuroscientific work on empathy. Such an interface is crucial because empathy is both ethically and epistemically central to mental health care. Mental health professionals effort of trying to understand the distressing experiences of patients will helpinstil a sense of dignity and respect for their suffering. Empathy is also epistemically central to psychiatry because the knowledge gained through the empathy effort helps to inform the collaborative care plan to be developed with the patient.The books first section sets the conceptual, epistemological and social neuroscience scene, including and acknowledging empathys potential risks and problems. Its second section addresses empathys role in medicine, descriptive psychopathology, psychological interventions, as well as the neurobiological basis of its disorders. The third section examines empathy in clinical situations such as psychosis, suicidal behaviour, personality disorders, alcohol or substance use disorders, forensicpsychiatry, and the care of autistic people. Its final section describes the role of empathy in the work of mental health nurses, occupational therapists, clinical psychiatrists, and mental health law lawyers, with a final chapter covering empathy in mental health care interventions provided byconversational artificial intelligence. The book closes with a call to place clinical empathy at the centre of mental health care provision and research to increase effectiveness, outcomes and patient experience.
Introduction; Section 1: Historical, Conceptual, and Neuroscience Matters; Historical Epistemology of Empathy; Empathy from a social neuroscience perspective; The problems of empathy; Section 2: Empathy in Medicine and Mental Health Care; Empathy in medicine; Empathy and descriptive psychopathology; Empathy: clinical assessment and the diagnostic process; Disorders of empathy and their neurobiological basis; Empathy and psychological interventions; Section 3: Empathy and the Care of Some Patients Groups; Empathy and the care of people experiencing psychosis; Empathy and the care of people with suicidal behaviour; Empathy and the care of people with a diagnosis of personality disorder; Empathy and the care of people with a diagnosis of alcohol or substance use disorder; Empathy, the care of autistic people, and the double empathy problem; Empathy in forensic psychiatry; Section 4: Empathy in Some Mental Health Care Contexts; Mental health nursing and empathy; The foundations of good practice: an occupational therapist s reflections on the use of an empathetic approach in modern psychiatric settings; Mental Health Act law, practice, and empathy; Empathy in mental health care interventions by conversational artificial intelligence; Clinical empathy and the work of general adult psychiatrists; Final remarks;
Comments (0)
Your review appreciation cannot be sent
Report comment
Are you sure that you want to report this comment?
Report sent
Your report has been submitted and will be considered by a moderator.