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MORE ABOUT THIS BOOK
Main description:
Mental disorders are among the most prevalent sources of disease burden in the world. Increasing recognition of this burden has led to an explosion of scientific research as well as widespread public attention. Understanding causes and consequences of mental health and mental disorders from the perspective of public health involves unique methods and concepts from many disciplines, including population-based surveys in a life course framework. Prevention and control of mental
disorders involves design and execution of intervention trials to prevent disorder in individuals who are currently healthy, and to minimize future consequences for those with current disorder or a history of disorder. Interventions of this type are important because good mental health protects against
onset of a variety of mental disorders, as well as being a valued outcome in itself. The complexity of the brain and its relationship to social life requires concepts, methods, and syntheses that are new for epidemiology and public health.
Public Mental Health provides a comprehensive introduction and reference for the public health approach to mental and behavioral disorders, and to promotion of mental health. The volume's chapter authors and coauthors are drawn from the internationally renowned faculty of the Department of Mental Health of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, a department uniquely positioned to create this important resource for researchers, students, and public health practitioners.
The volume explicates the latest methodologies for studying the occurrence of mental disorders in populations and provides estimates of burden, cultural differences, natural history, and disparities between population subgroups. It includes reviews of genes as sources of risk for mental disorders, the
occurrence of stresses and their timing over the life span, and crises and disasters as sources of risk. The book includes chapters on the structure and functioning of the mental health service system in the United States, and around the world, and a comprehensive review of population-based strategies of intervention to lower risk. A final chapter lays out a path for the evolution of public mental health in the future.
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Oxford University Press (OUP USA)
Publication date: August, 2012
Pages: 640
Weight: 1112g
Availability: Not available (reason unspecified)
Subcategories: Counselling & Therapy, Epidemiology, Psychiatry, Psychology, Public Health
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CUSTOMER REVIEWS
The book is well structured, moving logically through initial chapters on the nature of so-called mental disorder through to its prevention latterly. ...those also functioning in the realm of public health medicine will find the title of great usefulness. The strengths of this text are extensive. The book never loses sight of prevention as the ultimate goal in public health and as the ideal future for the field. The cultural aspects that are so often neglected in the literature are comprehensively discussed in an opening chapter and referenced throughout. The epidemiologic models that frame each chapter are at the forefront of current research, particularly the use of the life-course approach. Finally, the sections and chapters are well coordinated, with little overlap or redundancy. IN THIS rather chunky volume, William Eaton and colleagues make an impressive stab at summarising the current state and knowledge of public mental health internationally- a topic which may be unfamiliar to many but is moving ever nearer to the forefront of public health. The book begins at the very beginning (a very good place to start) with a section that reviews the symptoms and prevalence of many major mental health disorders - making it possible for even the uninitiated to pick up the book and quickly get a feel for the topic... While this book would be a worthy additional reference text on the shelves of even the most well versed of public mental health specialists, it is also written in such a way as to gently lead a novice through this rather fascinating but unfamiliar field.