Working in an emergency department as a psychiatrist or mental health clinician requires an ability to gain a patients rapport, establish a differential diagnosis, assess risk and make disposition decisions in a fast-paced and potentially chaotic setting. Patients may be medically ill, agitated, intoxicated, or suicidal, and resources for treatment may be difficult to access. A Case-Based Approach to Emergency Psychiatry provides the emergency department clinician withvivid and complex cases, discussed by psychiatrists who work daily in the emergency setting, that illustrate basic principles of assessment, diagnosis and treatment. These challenging and complex cases are based on the years of experience of the authors combined with current evidence-based practices anddiscussion. Risk assessment, psychosis, mood disorder, substance abuse, ethics, forensic issues, and personality disorders are discussed, along with child and adolescent, geriatric, and developmental disabilities. Special attention is also paid to alternatives to inpatient care, short-term crisis intervention, and the interface between medical and psychiatric illnesses. The case-based format allows the authors to link aspects of the clinical presentation to discussion and literature review ina memorable and compelling format.
Table of Contents; Introduction; Contributors; Chapter 1: Anxiety, Trauma and Hoarding; Katherine Maloy; Chapter 2: Mood Disorders: Clinical Examples and Risk Assessment; Jennifer Goldman; Chapter 3: Evaluating Suicide Risk in Psychotic Disorders; Katherine Maloy and Yona Silverman; Chapter 4: Evaluating Violence Risk in Psychotic Disorders; Abigail L. Dahan and Jessica Woodman; Chapter 5: Medical and Neurologic Syndromes; Jonathan Howard, Miriam Zincke, Anthony Dark, Bem Atim; Chapter 6: Substance Abuse: Intoxication and Withdrawal; Joe Kwon, Emily Deringer, Luke Archibald; Chapter 7: Evaluating the Geriatric Patient; Dennis Popeo; Chapter 8: Borderline and Narcissistic Personality Disorders; Wiktoria Bielska, Gillian Copeland; Chapter 9: Psychiatric Emergencies in Children and Adolescents; Ruth Gerson, Fadi Haddad; Chapter 10: Developmental and Autism Spectrum Disorders in Adults; Katherine Maloy; Chapter 11: Ethical and Legal Issues; Amit Rajparia; Chapter 12: Forensic Issues; Jennifer A. Mathur, Wiktoria Bielska, Rebecca Lewis, Bipin Subedi; Chapter 13: Short-Term Crisis Intervention and Mobile Crisis Evaluation; Adria Adams, Camilla Lyons, Madeline OBrien; Chapter 14: Somatization and Consulting to the Medical Emergency Department; Lindsay Gurin; Chapter 15: Psychodynamic Issues in Psychiatric Emergency Evaluation; Daniel J. Zimmerman; Chapter 16: Use of Language Interpretation; Bipin Subedi, Katherine Maloy; Chapter 17: The Homeless Patient; Katherine Maloy;
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