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How Can I Help?: A Week in My Life as a Psychiatrist

por David S. Goldbloom, Pier Bryden

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393640,441 (4.25)5
A humane behind-the-scenes account of a week in the life of a psychiatrist at one of Canada's leading mental health hospitals. How Can I Help? takes us to the frontlines of modern psychiatric care. How Can I Help? portrays a week in the life of Dr. David Goldbloom as he treats patients, communicates with families, and trains staff at CAMH, the largest psychiatric facility in Canada. This highly readable and touching behind-the-scenes account of his daily encounters with a wide range of psychiatric concerns--from his own patients and their families to Emergency Department arrivals--puts a human face on an often misunderstood area of medical expertise. From schizophrenia and borderline personality disorder to post-traumatic stress syndrome and autism, How Can I Help? investigates a range of mental issues. What is it like to work as a psychiatrist now? What are the rewards and challenges? What is the impact of the suffering--and the recovery--of people with mental illness on families and the clinicians who treat them? What does the future hold for psychiatric care? How Can I Help? demystifies a profession that has undergone profound change over the past twenty-five years, a profession that is often misunderstood by the public and the media, and even by doctors themselves. It offers a compassionate, realistic picture of a branch of medicine that is entering a new phase, as increasingly we are able to decode the mysteries of the brain and offer new hope for sufferers of mental illness.… (más)
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» Ver también 5 menciones

Mostrando 3 de 3
Very fortunate to receive a copy of this via a GoodReads Giveaway. Profound, insightful... it really hit home and provided a very interesting look at a side of the doctor-patient situation in mental health care that we rarely get to see. ( )
  JayeJ | May 21, 2019 |
Really, really good. ( )
  olegalCA | Dec 3, 2017 |
Doctors Goldbloom and Bryden set out to demystify mental illness and psychiatry, and to encourage people with psychiatric disorders to look for help. The narrative is written from Dr. Goldbloom's perspective, laid out as a week in his practice bracketed by a medical crisis in his own family. The "week" is really a composite week, rather than a literal one. Each half day looks at a different area of psychiatric practice, and different illnesses and treatments are described. It is not just a recital of everything he does in a day, but a framework for public education, science, history, ethics, case studies, social commentary, advocacy, and personal thoughts and emotions. They look at the history of how mental illnesses have been recognized and treated, and the current state of research and treatment; what is known and what is unknown. We learn about the evolution of psychiatry, and the areas and issues that still need to be addressed.

The focus of the narrative is well balanced between the patients, education about mental illness, history and current issues in psychiatry, and the doctor's own life, opinions and emotion. Some of the patients are real people who have agreed to their inclusion, and others are fictionalized or composites. All are described with compassion and respect. Goldbloom admits to his own limitations and biases. He talks about patients who he feels he has helped, and also those times that he wishes he had done more. The tone is personal, concerned, and sincere. Ethical issues are raised, and the ramifications are seriously considered. The conflict between individual liberties and personal and public safety is considered in different contexts. The importance of public education and the need for supportive social policies are recurring themes, as is the role of family in supporting people who are coping with mental illness.

The authors' goal in writing the book is ambitious, and they do an impressive job of executing it. There are no wasted words, with every incident in the book contributing to increasing the reader's understanding of issues relating to mental illness and psychiatry, and trying to lower the stigma attached to them. They have brought issues to my attention that I had never given much thought to before. I highly recommend this book, and hope that other readers will find it equally enlightening. ( )
  SylviaC | Jul 6, 2017 |
Mostrando 3 de 3
His goal, shared by his co-author and fellow psychiatrist Pier Bryden, is to reduce public fear of psychiatrists by showing what it is they really do, the conditions they treat, the resources they deploy and the setting in which they work.

Tracking Goldbloom over the course of a hypothetical week greatly expands our knowledge of what a psychiatrist in a teaching hospital does and gives us a textured picture of its complexity. ..... Freud and Linehan would approve.
 

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Goldbloom, David S.autor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
Bryden, Pierautor principaltodas las edicionesconfirmado
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A humane behind-the-scenes account of a week in the life of a psychiatrist at one of Canada's leading mental health hospitals. How Can I Help? takes us to the frontlines of modern psychiatric care. How Can I Help? portrays a week in the life of Dr. David Goldbloom as he treats patients, communicates with families, and trains staff at CAMH, the largest psychiatric facility in Canada. This highly readable and touching behind-the-scenes account of his daily encounters with a wide range of psychiatric concerns--from his own patients and their families to Emergency Department arrivals--puts a human face on an often misunderstood area of medical expertise. From schizophrenia and borderline personality disorder to post-traumatic stress syndrome and autism, How Can I Help? investigates a range of mental issues. What is it like to work as a psychiatrist now? What are the rewards and challenges? What is the impact of the suffering--and the recovery--of people with mental illness on families and the clinicians who treat them? What does the future hold for psychiatric care? How Can I Help? demystifies a profession that has undergone profound change over the past twenty-five years, a profession that is often misunderstood by the public and the media, and even by doctors themselves. It offers a compassionate, realistic picture of a branch of medicine that is entering a new phase, as increasingly we are able to decode the mysteries of the brain and offer new hope for sufferers of mental illness.

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