
This new edition of Psychiatric Ethics continues to serve as the most authoritative and comprehensive text on the many complex ethical dilemmas which face the clinician in everyday practice. In addition to addressing questions about drug therapy, sex therapy, suicide, and child psychiatry, among others, this up-to-date revision adds six new chapters discussing abuses in psychiatry in Japan and Nazi Germany; a conceptual analysis of what mental illness is; psychiatry as a profession; the ethical aspects of psychogeriatrics; and deinstitutionalization. This book is essential reading for all mental health professionals.
This text investigates the complex ethical dilemmas inherent in the clinical practice of psychiatry and the moral responsibilities of mental health professionals. Authors Paul Chodoff and Sidney Bloch compile contributions from various experts to establish a comprehensive framework for navigating the intersection of clinical care, patient rights, and societal expectations. The work utilizes historical analysis, case studies, and conceptual inquiry to address both routine clinical challenges and systemic abuses within the profession.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and practitioners regard this volume as a foundational reference for understanding the moral landscape of mental health care. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the breadth of historical context provided by the contributors.
Page Count:
576
Publication Date:
1991-04-25
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0192618644
ISBN-13:
9780192618641
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