No image available for this title

Ebook

Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing : the craft of caring



Contents Cover; Book title; Contents; List of contributors; Poem: The Cleansing has Begun; The Space I'm in; Poem: Half dead; Preface to the second edition; Acknowledgements; Section 1 THE NEED FOR NURSING; Preface to Section 1; 1 The nature of nursing; 2 Getting personal: being human in mental health care; 3 The care and confinement of the mentally ill; 4 Evidence-based practice in mental health; 5 The craft of psychiatric-mental health nursing practice; 6 Leading developments in the craft of caring; 7 Recovery: a personal perspective.
8 Recovery and reclamation: a pilgrimage in understanding who and what we areSection 2 ASSESSMENT IN PRACTICE; Preface to Section 2; 9 Assessment: the foundation of practice; 10 Assessment methods; 11 The craft of interviewing; 12 Developing collaborative assessment; 13 The context of family assessment; 14 The assessment of feelings, thoughts and beliefs; Section 3 THE STRUCTURE OF CARE; Preface to Section 3; 15 Psychiatric diagnosis; 16 Psychiatric diagnosis: living the experience; 17 Nursing diagnosis; 18 Collaboration with patients and families; Section 4 SPECIFIC NEEDS FOR NURSING.
Preface to Section 419 The person who experiences anxiety; 20 The person who experiences depression; 21 The person who is suicidal; 22 The person who self-harms; 23 The person who hears disturbing voices; 24 The person who experiences disturbing beliefs; 25 The person with a diagnosis of schizophrenia; 26 The person who appears aggressive or violent; 27 The person with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder; 28 The person with a diagnosis of personality disorder; 29 The person who experiences mental health and substance use problems; 30 The person who appears paranoid or suspicious.
31 The person with experience of sexual abuse32 The person with an eating disorder; 33 The person who is homeless; 34 The person with dementia; 35 The person with a diagnosis of autism; Section 5 SOME MODELS OF THERAPEUTIC PRACTICE; Preface to Section 5; 36 Developing therapeutic one-to-one relationships; 37 Developing empathy; 38 Groupwork with children and adolescents; 39 Psychodynamic approaches with individuals; 40 Psychodynamic approaches to working in groups; 41 Using counselling approaches; 42 Bereavement and grief counselling; 43 Cognitive-behavioural therapy.
44 Using solution-focused approaches45 Mindfulness; 46 Therapeutic communities; Section 6 THE ORGANIZATION OF CARE; Preface to Section 6; 47 The acute care setting; 48 The psychiatric intensive care unit: coercion, control or care; 49 Mental health nursing in community care; 50 Crisis assessment and resolution; 51 Assertive outreach; 52 Family support: growing the family support network; 53 The liaison psychiatric service; 54 Services for people requiring secure forms of care: a global problem; 55 Services for children and young people.
Abstract The Need for Nursing The nature of nursing Getting personal: being human in mental health care The care and confinement of the mentally ill Evidence-based practice in mental health The craft of psychiatric-mental health nursing practice Leading developments in the craft of caring Recovery: a personal perspective Recovery and reclamation: a pilgrimage in understanding who and what we are Assessment in Practice Assessment: the foundation of practice Assessment methods The craft of interviewing Developing collaborative assessment The context of family assessment The assessment of feelings, thoughts and beliefs The Structure for Care Psychiatric diagnosis Psychiatric diagnosis: living the experience Nursing diagnosis Collaboration with patients and families Specific Needs for Nursing The person who experiences anxiety The person who experiences depression The person who is suicidal The person who self-harms The person who hears disturbing voices The person who experiences disturbing beliefs The person with a diagnosis of schizophrenia The person who appears aggressive or violent The person with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder The person with a diagnosis of personality disorder The person who experiences mental health and substance use problems The person who appears paranoid or suspicious he person with experience of sexual abuse The person with an eating disorder The person who is homeless The person with a dementia The person with a diagnosis of autism Some Models of Therapeutic Practice Developing therapeutic one-to-one relationships Developing empathy Groupwork with children and adolescents Psychodynamic approaches with individuals Psychodynamic approaches to working in groups Using counselling approaches Bereavement and grief counselling Cognitive-behavioural therapy Using solution-focused approaches Mindfulness Therapeutic communities The. Organizationof Care The acute care setting The psychiatric intensive care unit: coercion, control or care Mental health nursing in community care Crisis assessment and resolution Assertive outreach Family support: growing the family support network The liaison psychiatry service Services for people requiring secure forms of care: a global problem Services for children and young people Services for older people with mental health conditions Early interventions in psychosis Services for women Services for asylum seekers and refugees Some Standardized Processes of Nursing Practice Admission to psychiatric unit Assessing risk of suicide and self-harm Engagement and observation of people at risk Record-keeping Discharge planning The nurse's role in the administration of electroconvulsive therapy Mental health promotion and prevention Mental health nurse prescribing Legal, Ethical and Moral Issues Mental health, the law and human rights Ethics and nursing Sexuality and gender Freedom and consent Providing culturally safe care Spirituality, nursing and mental health The Development of Mental Health Nursing Clinical supervision The possibility of genuine mental health nursing Building practice from research Reclamation: beyond recovery The Future of Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing in Context The United Kingdom context The European context The Japanese context The United States context The Canadian context The Australian and New Zealand context The politics of caring.


Availability

No copy data


Detail Information

Series Title
-
Call Number
-
Publisher CRC Press : Cigna Pub..,
Collation
1 online resource (780 pages)
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
-
Classification
-
Content Type
-
Media Type
-
Carrier Type
-
Edition
2nd
Subject(s)
Specific Detail Info
-
Statement of Responsibility

Other version/related

No other version available


File Attachment



Information


RECORD DETAIL


Back To PreviousXML DetailCite this