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Author | Edited by Kamaldeep Bhui |
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Table Of Content | Foreword. Desire and commitment: essential ingredients to learn about cultural and mental illness 1. Is trauma-focused therapy helpful for survivors of war and conflict? 2. Will ethnopsychopharmacology lead to changes in clinical practice? 3. Does cognitive-behavioural therapy work in people with very different cultural orientations and backgrounds? 4. Can you do meaningful cognitive-behavioural therapy with an interpreter? 5. Are specific psychotherapeutic orientations indicated with specific ethnic minority groups? 6. Can psychotherapeutic interventions overcome epistemic difference? 7. The role of culture and difference in evaluation, assessment, and diagnosis 8. Necessary and sufficient competencies for intercultural work 9. The validity of existing Eurocentric diagnostic categories 10. What are the limitations and benefits of the cultural formulation in intercultural work? 11. Barriers to the intercultural and interracial therapeutic relationship and how to overcome them 12. How does intercultural interpretation work in the mental health setting? 13. Do the power relations inherent in medical systems help or hinder in cross-cultural psychiatry? 14. Recovery and well-being: a paradigm for care 15. Social perspectives on diagnosis 16. Public mental health and inequalities 17. Does psychotherapy work through an interpreter? 18. Can race and racism be recognised and acknowledged in the transference in the therapeutic setting without it becoming a source of therapeutic impasse? 19. Cultural competence: models, measures and movements 20. Spirituality and mental health. |
Format | Paperback |
Publish Date | 1 Jan 2013 |