I run a geriatric psychiatry clinic at the university and supervise residents and medical students. |
|
This can only be to our advantage as we strive for a pathophysiologically based psychiatry. |
|
If psychiatry is to move forward it is necessary, but not sufficient, to resist state coercion and to listen to patients. |
|
Dr. Krishnan is chair and professor of psychiatry at Duke University Medical Center. |
|
Overall, he radiates a refreshing passion toward family psychiatry and a deep admiration for gestalt therapy. |
|
In psychiatry, a male's need for exhibitionism could be seen as a reaction against castration anxiety. |
|
He was at the forefront of developments in what became known as liaison psychiatry. |
|
Optimism about curability was misplaced despite the emerging science of psychiatry, and hospital crowding led to a lapse to custodianship again. |
|
Before I was a Scientologist, I never agreed with psychiatry and I know that psychiatry is a pseudoscience. |
|
One of the real tasks in psychiatry is to be able to sit with and experience people in their entirety, and not as a set of boxes. |
|
Psychotherapy may be in conflict with biomedical psychiatry in its conceptualisation of mental illness. |
|
The Jungian approach to treatment is, again, very different from conventional psychiatry. |
|
Science is sometimes an art, and psychiatry I would say is as much an art as it is a science. |
|
In this country, we fear psychiatry and we fear that it is the peddling ground for pharmaceutical giants. |
|
Biological psychiatry and psychology need to rediscover the question of cure. |
|
Psychology may have little to gain but much to lose in becoming more like psychiatry. |
|
In modern psychiatry ECT and psychosurgery are used in a much more discriminate and refined manner. |
|
They entered psychology or psychiatry with an interest in understanding people's behaviour. |
|
Like every other medical science, psychiatry is there to help people, and is built around the scientific method. |
|
American psychiatry is said to have changed from blaming the mother to blaming the brain. |
|
|
Freud, the father of psychiatry believed that there is a competition between a son and a father. |
|
In psychiatry different paradigms and approaches to treatment are hotly contested. |
|
Treatment of psychiatry is not altering the biochemistry of the brain, it's also healing the soul. |
|
Joze was a leading figure in the field of psychiatry of learning disability. |
|
Elektra does, however, anticipate not only psychoanalysis, but other developments in psychiatry. |
|
It draws most heavily on internal medicine, paediatrics, obstetrics and gynaecology, surgery, psychiatry and preventive medicine. |
|
So, psychiatry has a problem here, they are rightly being called on the carpet for lack of science. |
|
This text examines how clinicians in the psychiatry field treat anorexia nervosa, bulimia nervosa and binge-eating disorders. |
|
Most unfilled posts were in general medicine and surgery, but there were also large numbers in anaesthetics, pathology, and psychiatry. |
|
During that era, many medical professionals and the general public considered neuropsychiatry to be almost synonymous with biological psychiatry. |
|
She gained her first degree in psychology and second in psychiatry and clinical social work. |
|
Similarly, neurofeedback signals a convergence of psychiatry and neurology in bioelectrical approaches to treating affective disorders. |
|
I decided to challenge what I considered to be a misdirection of psychiatry. |
|
His medical residencies were in internal medicine and clinical psychiatry at the University of Florida. |
|
Foucault inspired subsequent critics of psychiatry, of varying degrees of scholarliness, rationality, and clarity of exposition. |
|
He analyzes various traditions of nineteenth-century associationist psychiatry in remarkably original terms. |
|
In the German-speaking world, the marginalization of the asylums was also a product of the rise of clinical psychiatry. |
|
The young people benefited from psychotherapy, music, and art therapy, as well as nursing and psychiatry. |
|
In discussing psychiatry and the arts, I cannot resist indulging my interest in psychiatry and film. |
|
Likewise, the author of a psychiatry self-help book and his customers are engaging in a commercial transaction. |
|
|
However, a certain bias in Western psychiatry exists against somatization as an inferior way of dealing with emotions and intrapsychic conflicts. |
|
Incidents have been investigated in obstetrics, anaesthetics, accident and emergency, orthopaedics, general medicine, and psychiatry. |
|
The need for continued research into the affinity for what is unalive is still an important task for students of psychoanalysis and psychiatry. |
|
During year 3, all students study medicine, surgery, paediatrics, women's health, general practice, and liaison psychiatry. |
|
Dr. Freedman is chair and professor of psychiatry, emeritus at New York Medical College. |
|
Some have dedicated their expertise to specific areas including sports medicine, palliative care, psychiatry and obstetrics. |
|
Community psychiatry is the victim of too many strong opinions. |
|
By analyzing the technique of deep brain stimulation, we will investigate the entry of psychiatry in the Big Science thanks to neuroscience. |
|
Proponents of orthomolecular psychiatry, who suggest that more subtle vitamin deficiencies exist in a number of neurologic and behavior disorders, recommend a megavitamin therapeutic approach. |
|
The unit will house the addictology, psychiatry, Alzheimer's care and psychogeriatrics departments. |
|
Abusing the ethics and practice of psychiatry, the Kremlin locked up political opponents of the regime in asylums and labelled them mentally ill. |
|
A historical survey of the study of hallucinations reflects the development of scientific thought in psychiatry, psychology, and neurobiology. |
|
These conclusions unnerved Kelley and eventually led him to change the focus of his career from psychiatry to criminology. |
|
Introductory-level texts were selected, as these are more apt to be used by medical students in psychiatry courses and during clinical clerkships. |
|
It now appears that it began earlier still, as an experiment in both architecture and psychiatry, in the gardens of the hospital at Sant Boi. |
|
A qualified medical officer with experience in psychiatry shall be available to attend the detention centre. |
|
I spent many years working in health care, specifically, in child psychiatry. |
|
This pressure is also reflected in the expansion of health planning, which has attributed psychiatry a growing range of tasks over the years. |
|
Over the past few years, we have observed an increase in the demand for forensic psychiatry and waiting lists continue getting longer. |
|
Some psychiatry residents participate in this at some point in their training. |
|
|
But when it comes to manufacturing disease, nobody does it like psychiatry. |
|
During my years in child psychiatry, I saw countless parents struggle helplessly with the cost of these services. |
|
If faced with similar circumstances, an employer may wish to consider securing an employee's consent to a referral to a specialist in psychiatry. |
|
They are referred to general practitioners or specialists, in paediatric psychiatry for example. |
|
He also holds an academic appointment in psychiatry at the University of Toronto. |
|
He is a trained medical doctor specializing in tropical and parasitic medicine, and has a background in psychiatry. |
|
In fact, we have always maintained that psychiatric rehabilitation must begin with the rehabilitation of psychiatry. |
|
Thirdly, there was a lack of knowledge or interest by the Montreal forensic psychiatry agency. |
|
Earlier experience includes primarily psychiatric nursing in a variety of related areas including geriatrics, acute psychiatry rehabilitation and community mental health. |
|
My interest in psychiatry didn't begin with an interest in brain biology. |
|
Freud pioneered psychiatry, Einstein framed his theory of relativity, and Rutherford discovered the structure of the atom. |
|
The terms orthomolecular psychiatry and megavitamin therapy are now used interchangably for the treatment of behavioral disorders with large amounts of vitamins and minerals. |
|
This Institute brings together for the first time the basic neurosciences with psychiatry and neurology to investigate the fundamental neuronal basis of mental illness. |
|
A Clinician's Guide is part of a growing countercurrent within psychiatry, psychology, and allied disciplines, aimed at redressing the shortcomings of that legacy. |
|
This field establishes a network of various individual disciplines, such as psychology, molecular genetics, neurology and psychiatry. |
|
Social psychiatry has not survived, and the overwhelming predominance of psychopharmacological treatments of mental illness leaves us much the poorer. |
|
The memories of the horror of the lobotomy victims are still fresh in a lot of psychiatry professors' minds. |
|
This includes consultant posts in emergency care, haematology and old-age psychiatry. |
|
The narrator, a Nigerian psychiatry student, is emotionally distant, ruminative, and intellectual. |
|
We make sure their paracetamol levels are not within liver-killing range and call the psychiatry teams. |
|
|
Unlike modern neurology, psychiatry and psychology, Yoga considers the mind to be another sense. |
|
Because mental illnesses are multisystem illnesses, neurocentric psychiatry alone can never provide the path to wellness. |
|
This episode deals with the psychiatry of the Sixties, the rejection of Freud and the growth of the anti-establishment, which might sound worthy until I tell you this story. |
|
I'm a psychiatry intern, and this is my electroconvulsive therapy rotation. |
|
Dr. Richard A. Friedman, a professor of clinical psychiatry at Weil Cornell Medical College in New York City, agrees. |
|
This breakthrough established the foundations for the orthomolecular psychiatry now practised around the world. |
|
One is Dr. Anthony Rothschild, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts in Worcester and the author of a 1991 report of three patients who developed akathisia and became more suicidal on Prozac. |
|
The project works with residential facilities for homeless people, the misuser treatment system, services for mentally ill people, the district psychiatry facilities and the health authorities. |
|
The hospital is providing services of gynae, medical, surgical, paediatrics and psychiatry. |
|
Before joining the federal government, he was a professor of psychiatry at Harvard and director of its interfaculty initiative in mind, brain and behavior. |
|
Specialists in medical ethics would complement the heavily empirical focus of psychiatry with the explicitly normative concerns of rigorously developed ethical systems such as utilitarianism, Kantianism and virtue ethics. |
|
Author of more than 350 articles and chapters, Dr. Stahl is an internationally recognized clinician, researcher and teacher in psychiatry with subspecialty expertise in psychopharmacology. |
|
A graduate of the Medical College in 1967, Dr. Lamontagne has devoted most of his career to stimulating research in psychiatry and demystifying mental illness among the general public. |
|
Both the neurology notes and psychiatry notes clearly stated that no athetoid movements were noted on examination. |
|
The Chaleur Regional Hospital currently provides specialized services in the following areas: maxillofacial surgery, endocrinology, plastic surgery, obstetrics, cardiology, nephrology, child psychiatry, and internal medicine. |
|
Dr. Sheehan has been invited to give over 1600 lectures in 64 countries throughout the world on anxiety and mood disorders, psychopharmacology and biological psychiatry. |
|
Her research interests are on the role of circadian rhythms in psychiatry, the interaction between circadian rhythms and menstrual cycles, the expression of circadian clock genes in humans, and adaptation to shift work. |
|
I have no evidence to support that, and I think my civilian psychiatry and psychology colleagues would take exception to me stating that we would do a better job. |
|
Schizophrenia, a disease typical in western psychiatry, is found overseas only in extreme forms whereas fits of delirium said to be polymorphous, brief and reversible, are very frequent in black people. |
|
It was a huge undertaking for a little guy like me who was working alone, and who was one of the first in France to take a scientific rather than sociological approach to child psychiatry. |
|
|
Claire is married with two children, and spent 11 years in a major pharmaceutical laboratory in England and France, where she worked in a number of fields, in particular psychiatry and neurology. |
|
At the time the program was started, Ottawa's psychiatric hospital, The Royal Ottawa, had closed its emergency service and no longer provided consultations in general psychiatry. |
|
The Hospital had a 1,100 bed capacity and 1,062 patients, according to the 1952 figures: 105 beds were for general medicine, 448 for psychiatry, 7 for tubercular patients, and 502 for Veterans. |
|
This dialectic and the sometimes-conflicting tensions between clinical, ethnical and organisational issues bear witness to the paradigm shift from psychiatry to mental health. |
|
I would comment on it further to say that it's regrettable that it has been said in the media that excited delirium is not in the parlance of psychiatry. |
|
Psychiatrists who subspecialize usually do MOC for general psychiatry and all their subspecialties. |
|
There he published a paper on orthomolecular psychiatry that explained how mental health could be achieved by manipulating substances normally present in the body. |
|
These NRC scientists believe that the honing the ability of EEGs and fMRI to tell us more about brain function will lead to earlier diagnosis and treatment of neurological and psychiatry conditions. |
|
That board comprises a group of specialists in neurology, cardiology, psychiatry, ophthalmology, internal medicine, otolaryngology, and aviation medicine. |
|
Indeed, we need an Apgar score for everyone who encounters medicine: the psychiatry patient, the patient on the hospital ward, the person going through an operation, and the mother in childbirth. |
|
Members of the scientific subcommittees included researchers and practitioners in the fields of psychology, developmental pediatrics, psychiatry, epidemiology, education, occupational therapy, and audiology. |
|
It is recognised for its expertise in fluorinated products, the environment and its four therapeutic areas: gastroenterology, psychiatry, cardiology and gynaecology. |
|
Delirium is common in the parlance of psychiatry, and excited delirium I'm sure is well known to every doctor in the hospital who has to deal with patients who come in in an excited state. |
|
Renaud Jardri has seen many children with hallucinations in his clinical practice and also researches the area as part of his role as a professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at the Lille University school of medicine. |
|
Patients often opposed psychiatry and refused or stopped taking the drugs when not subject to psychiatric control. |
|
The institute is the largest centre for research and postgraduate education in psychiatry, psychology and neuroscience in Europe. |
|
Samuel Willard treated smallpox victims, was a forerunner of modern psychiatry, and ran the first hospital for mental illness in America. |
|
It is an essential read for clinicians working in the areas of sexology, counselling, psychology and psychiatry. |
|
The resident did not seek to reconcile theology and psychiatry. |
|
Because it was a phantom pregnancy, we had to get her seen by the psychiatry team and a by a social worker. |
|
|
Future challenges in psychiatry from the reflections of a quinquagenarian. |
|
The DEA is ignored that recommendation, kept MDMA in Schedule 1 and was subsequently sued by one of the drug's proponents, Harvard psychiatry professor Lester Grinspoon. |
|
Glazer, MD, associate clinical professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, how to best manage tardive dyskinesia in patients on antipsychotic therapy is explained. |
|
He is university professor emeritus of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and president of the Beck Institute for Cognitive Therapy and Research. |
|
In psychiatry, the term neologism is used to describe words that have meaning only to the person who uses them, independent of their common meaning. |
|
Consider the views of Herbert Hendin, a professor of psychiatry and a leading suicidologist, who is opposed to the legalization of doctor-assisted suicide. |
|
He also discusses the role of gender identity clinics in gender transition, with specific focus on the Clarke Institute of Psychiatry in Toronto. |
|
Psychiatry has provided fertile soil for endless theories about distress and madness. |
|
I spent my 1977 sabbatical year in his Department at the Institute of Psychiatry in London. |
|
Jung's decision to be a psychiatrist came towards the end of his medical studies when he dipped into Krafft-Ebing's Textbook of Psychiatry. |
|
Psychiatry arose in the 19th century, when its main role was to provide custodial care for the mentally ill. |
|
Now, Dr. Kuriansky represents the American Psychological Association and is also an adjunct assistant professor at the Department of Psychiatry at Columbia University. |
|
This month, Carroll published an overview of the field online in Current Psychiatry Reports. |
|
Under the agreement, Elsevier will continue to provide publishing services for the society's journal Biological Psychiatry. |
|
Walkup said at a psychopharmacology update sponsored by the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. |
|
Pink-in particular, a shade close to bubble gum-has calming effects, according to research published in the Journal of Orthomolecular Psychiatry. |
|
Psychiatry is not always viewed as a major medical specialty. |
|
A total number of 97 patients were assessed at the Psychogeriatric Outpatient Service of Department of Psychiatry at the Shimane University Hospital. |
|
Dement is a Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the Stanford University School of Medicine, and the Division Chief of the Stanford University Division of Sleep. |
|
In a January 2014 study, conducted in the British Journal of Psychiatry, scientists found that comedians tend to have high levels of psychotic personality traits. |
|
|
The trustee was the Professor of Psychiatry at Guy's Hospital, London. |
|
In the initial stages, patients treated in the departments of Neurology, Physiotherapy, Paediatrics, and Psychiatry will enjoy the benefits of music therapy. |
|
The research she quotes by Dr Priscilla Coleman was published in the British Journal of Psychiatry and has been thoroughly discredited as methodologically flawed. |
|
In the December AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY, the scientists report finding that 26 of the autistics had been diagnosed early in life with one of 12 rare diseases. |
|