Bültmann & Gerriets
Biopsychosocial Approaches in Primary Care
State of the Art and Challenges for the 21st Century
von Hoyle Leigh
Verlag: Springer US
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ISBN: 978-1-4615-5957-3
Auflage: 1997
Erschienen am 06.12.2012
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 242 Seiten

Preis: 96,29 €

Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Introduction: Medicine in a Changing Universe at the Threshold of the 21st Century.- 1. Psychiatric Diagnosis in Primary Care: The Biopsychosocial Perspective.- 2. Biopsychosocial Approaches to Anxiety in Primary Care.- 3. Biopsychosocial Approaches to Depression in Primary Care.- 4. Psychiatry in the Primary Care Setting: Managing Chronic Illness: Psychiatric Issues.- 5. Factitious Physical Disorders in the Managed Care Setting.- 6. Chronic Pain.- 7. Biopsychosocial Approaches to Mental Disorders in the Elderly.- 8. Aggressive Nutritional Program for the Institutionalized Alzheimer's Patient.- 9. The Expanded Biopsychosocial Model in Child Psychiatry.- 10. From Biopsychosocial Model to Patientology.- 11. Teaching Psychiatry to Primary Care Physicians.- 12. Psychosomatic Thinking as Reflected in Practice and Teaching of Primary Health Care - Introducing the Salutogenic Approach.- 13. Reductionism Revisited: Return of the Biomedical Model.- 14. Religion and Spirituality in the Primary Care Setting: Toward the 21st Century.- 15. A Biopsychosocial Critique of Managed Mental Health Care and Its Relation to Primary Care.- Contributors.



ST MEDICINE IN A CHANGING UNIVERSE AT THE THRESHOLD OF THE 21 CENTURY Hoyle Leigh, M. D. I Professor ofPsychiatry San Francisco, University ofCalifornia, and Fresno VAMedical Center INTRODUCTION During my lifetime, the universe has changed beyond recognition. The universe into 111 which I was born, in the first halfofthe 20 century, was still infinite, permanent, orderly, and tranquil --- a universe that worked like a masterfully constructed clock. Matter and energy followed Newton's lawsofconservation. Shortly after my birth, Hiroshima proved, with a big bang, that matter was no longer permanent, everything was relative. Einstein had also shown thateverything that happened was local, that is, there was an event horizon beyond which no information could reach as nothing can travel faster than light. When I was growing up, the moon was for lovers, and going there was an impossible dream. Cosmologically, the Big Bang theory that postulates that the universe was born out ofan explosion some 10-15 billion years ago from a primordial point won over steady state. Ithas been expanding ever since, although the ultimate fateofthe universe is still unknown ­ whetherit will keep on expanding resulting in aperpetual stateofheat death, or will at some point startcontracting, resulting in a big crunch ofgravitational collapse ending in a single black hole out ofspace, time, and existence. Quantum theory has defeated even Einstein's genius and proven that God indeed plays dice.


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