Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology

Caring for the Treatment-Resistant Patient


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By David Mintz
Imprint:
AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION PUBLISHING
Release Date:

Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
0

Description


  • Preface


  • Part 1. What Is Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology?



  • Chapter 1. What Is Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology?

  • Chapter 2. Why Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology?

  • Chapter 3. What Is Psychodynamic About Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology?


  • Part 2. Understanding Pharmacological Treatment Resistance



  • Chapter 4. Psychodynamics of Pharmacological Treatment Resistance

  • Chapter 5. Treatment Resistance to Medications

  • Chapter 6. Treatment Resistance From Medications

  • Chapter 7. The Prescribers Contribution to Treatment Resistance


  • Part 3. The Manual of Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology



  • Chapter 8. Avoid a Mind-Body Split

  • Chapter 9. Know Who the Patient Is

  • Chapter 10. Attend to Patients Ambivalence

  • Chapter 11. Cultivate the Pharmacotherapeutic Alliance

  • Chapter 12. Attend to Countertherapeutic Uses of Medications

  • Chapter 13. Identify, Contain, and Use Countertransference

  • Chapter 14. Who Is Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology For? Patient Characteristics

  • Chapter 15. Before Initiating Treatment

  • Chapter 16. The Engagement Phase

  • Chapter 17. The Maintenance Phase

  • Chapter 18. Split and Combined Treatments

  • Chapter 19. Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology and Integrated Care

  • Appendix 1. Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology Self-Assessment Checklist

  • Appendix 2. Glossary of Psychodynamic Concepts Relevant to the Practice of Pharmacotherapy

  • Index


Dr. David Mintz has done a great service in this excellent book for those who prescribe psychiatric medications: he has provided an important approach to optimizing treatment outcomes by integrating pharmacotherapy with a psychodynamically-informed perspective that enhances therapeutic factors for the patient and in the doctor-patient encounter. Through clinical examples and literature review he has defined what many clinicians have learned through experience but were not taught as part of their psychopharmacology education. The interpersonal context of the prescribing relationship between prescriber and patient may have deep psychodynamic meaning to many patients. Understanding these factors (such as transference to parental figures) can enhance the adherence and effectiveness of treatments. I recommend this book for all psychopharmacology prescribers.—Carl Salzman M.D., Professor of Psychiatry Harvard Medical School


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