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Contemporary Topics in Women′s Mental Health
Global perspectives in a changing society
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Main description:

Contemporary Topics in Women s Mental Health considers both mental health and psychiatric disorders in relation to social, cultural and economic changes, from a distinctive global and multicultural perspective. It features contributions from an impressive collection of international experts relevant to people working around the world in different settings. The Editors are authorities in women s mental health in their respective geographic regions and bring to the book their field experience and wisdom on critical issues.

The book gives due importance to recent advances in the neurobiology of psychiatric disorders, reproductive health and psychopharmacology but above all demonstrates that women s mental health and psychiatric disorders cannot be divorced from social, cultural and political realities. It recognises the impact of rapid social change and stresses such as migration, war and violence, as these have severe effects on women, especially those caring for children and families.


Specific sections address reproductive health, the impact of changes and life challenges, service delivery and ethics, and social policies that affect women s mental health. There are important chapters exploring pregnancy and the postpartum period, the consequences of female genital mutilation, and migration and mental health in women. There is also a chapter capturing experiential stories of women with mental illness from different countries and contexts. Each section is introduced by a commentary from the Editors highlighting key questions.


Includes a Foreword by Sir Michael Marmot, Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, Chair Commission on Social Determinants of Health


Contemporary Topics in Women s Mental Health is important reading for psychiatrists, as well as postgraduates, researchers and policy makers concerned with mental health. This is a book that looks at women s mental health from a fresh and exciting perspective that will appeal to people around the globe.


Back cover:

Contemporary Topics in Women s Mental Health considers both mental health and psychiatric disorders in relation to social, cultural and economic changes, from a distinctive global and multicultural perspective. It features contributions from an impressive collection of international experts relevant to people working around the world in different settings. The Editors are authorities in women s mental health in their respective geographic regions and bring to the book their field experience and wisdom on critical issues.

The book gives due importance to recent advances in the neurobiology of psychiatric disorders, reproductive health and psychopharmacology but above all demonstrates that women s mental health and psychiatric disorders cannot be divorced from social, cultural and political realities. It recognises the impact of rapid social change and stresses such as migration, war and violence, as these have severe effects on women, especially those caring for children and families.


Specific sections address reproductive health, the impact of changes and life challenges, service delivery and ethics, and social policies that affect women s mental health. There are important chapters exploring pregnancy and the postpartum period, the consequences of female genital mutilation, and migration and mental health in women. There is also a chapter capturing experiential stories of women with mental illness from different countries and contexts. Each section is introduced by a commentary from the Editors highlighting key questions.


Includes a Foreword by Sir Michael Marmot, Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, Chair Commission on Social Determinants of Health


Contemporary Topics in Women s Mental Health is important reading for psychiatrists, as well as postgraduates, researchers and policy makers concerned with mental health. This is a book that looks at women s mental health from a fresh and exciting perspective that will appeal to people around the globe.


Contents:

1 Psychotic disorders and bipolar affective disorder BPAD

R. Thara and R. Padmavati


1.1 Psychotic disorders in women


1.2 Schizophrenia


1.3 Bipolar disorder


1.4 Other psychoses


1.5 Special issues in women with severe mental illness


 


2 Depression and anxiety among women


Nadia Kadri and Khadiza Mchichi Alami


2.1 Introduction


2.2 Epidemiology


2.3 Transcultural aspect of affective disturbances in Sub–Saharan Africa


2.4 Treatment effects


2.5 Sexual differences in depression and anxiety disorders: biological determinants


2.6 Sexual differences in depression and anxiety disorders: social factors


2.7 Mood and anxiety disorders across lifespan in women


2.8 Pregnancy


2.9 Motherhood


2.10 Conclusion


 


3 Somatisation and dissociation


Santosh K. Chaturvedi and Ravi Philip


3.1 Introduction


3.2 Somatisation definitions and concept


3.3 Dissociation definitions and concept


3.4 The diagnosis and classification of somatoform and dissociative disorders


3.5 The neurobiology of somatisation and dissociation


3.6 Psychological factors


3.7 Conversion disorder


3.8 Hypochondriasis


3.9 Dissociative disorders


3.10 Conclusions


 


4 Eating disorders


Robert L. Palmer and Dr Sarvath Abbas


4.1 Introduction


4.2 Risk factors and pathogenesis


4.3 Distribution


4.4 Presentation, assessment, diagnosis and engagement


4.5 Treatment and management


4.6 Conclusion


 


5 Suicidality in women


Gergö Hadlaczky and Dannuta Wasserman


5.1 Definitions


5.2 Epidemiology


5.3 Suicidality and mental disorders and risk


5.4 Suicide prevention


 


6 Alcohol and substance abuse


Florence Baingana


6.1 Introduction


6.2 Genetics of alcohol and drug abuse


6.3 Burden of the problem and patterns of drinking


6.4 Alcohol and drug abuse, risky sexual behaviour and HIV vulnerability


6.5 Stigma, women and alcohol and drug abuse


6.6 Health consequences


6.7 Social and economic consequences


6.8 Interventions


6.9 Challenges


6.10 Research


6.11 Recommendations


6.12 Conclusions


 


7 Psychiatric consequences of trauma in women


Elie G. Karam, Mariana M. Salamoun and Salim El–Sabbagh


7.1 Introduction


7.2 What types of traumata are more common among women?


7.3 How do women respond to trauma?


7.4 What are the trauma related risk factors?


7.5 Which mental disorders are related to trauma?


7.6 Future directions


 


8 Voices of consumers – women with mental illness share their experiences


Shoba Raja


8.1 ′Ni Tagibebu′ – I will change my lifestyle


8.2 Determined to go against the odds


8.3 Brilliant madness – a narrative by a young woman from India who is recovering from mental illness


8.4 From illness to purpose and recovery


8.5 Conclusions


 


9 Mental aspects of pregnancy, childbirth and the postpartum period


Jane Fisher, Meena Cabral de Mello and Takashi Izutsu


9.1 Mental health and maternal mortality


9.2 Mental health and antenatal morbidity


9.3 Depression in pregnancy


9.4 Anxiety in pregnancy


9.5 Cultural preferences and mental health in pregnancy


9.6 Inflicted violence and mental health in pregnancy


9.7 Mental health and postpartum morbidity


9.8 Postpartum blues or mild transient mood disturbance


9.9 Postpartum psychotic illness


9.10 Postpartum depression


9.11 Psychosocial risk factors for postpartum depression


9.12 Infant factors and maternal mental health


9.13 Cultural specificity of postpartum mood disturbance


9.14 Maternal mental health, infant development and the mother–infant relationship


9.15 Prevention and treatment of maternal mental health problems


9.16 Summary


 


10 Psychological issues and reproductive health conditions: an interface


Veena A. Satyanarayana, Geetha Desai and Prabha S. Chandra


10.1 Introduction


10.2 Infertility: a psychosocial appraisal


10.3 The psychological implications of hysterectomy


10.4 Gynaecological infections


10.5 Conclusions


 


11 Menopause and women′s mental health: the need for a multidimensional approach


Jill Astbury


11.1 Introduction


11.2 Social, cultural and contextual factors


11.3 Variations in symptoms and symptom patterns


11.4 The research evidence


11.5 Is menopause a time of increased risk for women′s mental health?


11.6 The relationship between menopause and depression in midlife


11.7 The need for a life course perspective


11.8 Methodological difficulties


11.9 Therapeutic approaches in mid life


11.10 Conclusion


 


12 Ethics in psychiatric research among women


Laura Roberts and Kristen Prentice


12.1 The scientific imperative to include women in psychiatric research


12.2 The ethical challenges of psychiatric research


12.3 Unique challenges of psychiatric research in women


12.4 Summary


 


13 Integrating mental health into women′s health and primary healthcare: the case of Chile


Graciela Rojas and Enrique Jadresic


13.1 Introduction


13.2 Integrating mental health into primary healthcare


13.3 Integrating mental health into women′s health


 


14 Service settings for gender sensitive psychiatric care: children and adolescents


Corina Benjet


 


15 Gender sensitive care for adult women


Marta B. Rondon


15.1 Gender sensitive and informed mental healthcare: basic strategies


15.2 Principles of gender sensitive care


15.3 Characteristics of gender sensitive services


 


16 Psychopharmacology


Silvana Sarabia


16.1 History of psychopharmocology


16.2 Ethics


16.3 Sources and interpretation of data


16.4 Women in clinical trials


16.5 Pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics in women


16.6 Psychotropic treatments in women


16.7 Treatment of postpartum disorders


 


17 Women and disasters


Unaiza Niaz


17.1 Wars and women′s mental health


17.2 Natural disasters and women


17.3 Conclusion


 


18 Intimate partner violence interventions


Krishna Vaddiparti and Deepthi S. Varma


18.1 Mental health consequences of intimate partner violence on women


18.2 Victim focused interventions


18.3 Interventions with batterers of violence


18.4 Other intervention approaches


18.5 Conclusion


 


19 Migration and mental health in women: mental health action plan as a tool to increase communication between clinicians and policy makers


Solvig Ekblad


19.1 Definitions: mental health and health


19.2 Introduction


19.3 Risk factors


19.4 Resilience and coping


19.5 The impact of domestic violence on immigrant women′s mental health


19.6 Access to mental healthcare services


19.7 The ADAPT model (adaptation and development after persecution and trauma)


19.8 The case of Mrs Aba, her family and the community


19.9 Theory of change logic: mental health action planning


 


20 Work and women′s mental health


Saida Douki


20.1 Introduction: A late but growing awareness


20.2 The job burnout


20.3 A higher risk for burnout


20.4 Work and women′s mental health issues


20.5 Management issues


20.6 Conclusion


 


21 Globalisation and women′s mental health: cutting edge information


Unaiza Niaz


21.1 Concept and process of globalisation


21.2 Gendered effects of globalisation


21.3 The impact of globalisation and liberalisation on women′s health


21.4 Education and empowerment in women


21.5 United Nation and World Banks approach to women′s education


21.6 The global and local intersection of feminisation in Muslim societies


21.7 Other impacts of globalisation


21.8 Internet addiction


21.9 Mental health issues related to the use of Internet and mobile phones in the developing countries


21.10 Recommendations to counteract negative effects of globalisation


 


22 The impact of culture on women′s mental health


Marianne Kastrup and Unaiza Niaz


22.1 Introduction


22.2 Definitions


22.3 Epidemiological perspectives


22.4 Cultural aspects of stress


22.5 Diagnostic considerations


22.6 Cultural and social practices and their impact on mental health


22.7 Therapeutic issues


22.8 Perspectives


 


23 Female mutilation


Almira Seif Eldin


23.1 Definition


23.2 Introduction


23.3 Historical background


23.4 Classification


23.5 Epidemiology of FGM


23.6 Physical complication of FGM


23.7 Psychological complication


23.8 Posttraumatic stress disorder and memory problems after FGM


23.9 Obstacles facing changing harmful social convention: female genital mutilation/cutting


23.10 The basic concept for FGM elimination: (The mental map for FGM)


23.11 Recommendations in countries where FGM is commonly practiced


 


24 Women′s mental health in the concept of broad global policies


Takashi Izutsu


24.1 Definitions of health and the right to health made by the United Nations


24.2 The Fourth World Conference on Women Platform for Action (1995)


24.3 Conventions


24.4 Other international tools


24.5 New aid environment: sector wide approaches and the poverty reduction strategy paper


24.6 Conclusion


 


25 Families of origin as agents determining women′s mental health


Wenhong Cheng


25.1 The impact of the family of origins perspectives about females on the growth of women


25.2 Impact of parenthood on women′s mental health


25.3 Families, social change and women′s mental health


 


26 The unpaid workload: gender discrimination in conceptualization and its impact on women′s mental health


Jane Fisher


26.1 Maternal desire


26.2 Disenfranchised grief and motherhood


26.3 Fantasies of motherhood


26.4 Fantasies about the workload


26.5 Workload of motherhood


26.6 Occupational fatigue as a determinant of maternal mood?


26.7 Recognition and valuing of work and occupational satisfaction


26.8 Training and education for mothering


26.9 Presumptions about the contributions of others to the workload


26.10 Collegial relationships


26.11 Honouring the work of mothers in practice and policy


 


27 Foundations of human development: maternal care in the early years


Linda M. Richter and Tamsen Rochat


27.1 Child development and human culture


27.2 Interactions and relationships


27.3 Maternal mental health and children′s development


27.4 Maternal care


27.5 Implications for mental healthcare


27.6 Increased choices for women


 


28 The adverse impact of psychological aggression, coercion and violence in the intimate partner relationship on women′s mental health


Toshiko Kamo


28.1 Prevalence and nature of intimate partner violence


28.2 Impact of intimate partner violence on general health


28.3 Mental health problems among women affected by intimate partner violence


28.4 Intimate partner violence, children and intergenerational patterns of abuse


PRODUCT DETAILS

ISBN-13: 9780470746738
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Ltd (Wiley–Blackwell)
Publication date: September, 2009
Pages: 594
Dimensions: 250.00 x 177.00 x 37.95
Weight: 1170g
Availability: Not available (reason unspecified)
Subcategories: Diseases and Disorders, Psychiatry

MEET THE AUTHOR

Prabha S. Chandra is a Professor of Psychiatry at the Department of Psychiatry at the National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bangalore, India. She has served as a member of the WPA section on women s mental health and is the first person from a developing country to be elected to the executive of the Marce International Perinatal Psychiatry Society.   She has also been a convener and chairperson of the Task force on women s mental health of the Indian Psychiatric Society.

Her main research contributions in the areas of women s mental health have been in perinatal psychiatry, psychosomatic obsetrics and gynecology and the role of violence in women with mental illness. Prof. Chandra has received several national awards for research in womens mental health.  She has been a member of the Advisory group on HIV Behavioral Research of the Indian Council of Medical Research and has also served as a Temporary Advisor to the WHO and UNAIDS.  She has about 90 publications in the above areas of research and has edited several books and training manuals.


Helen Herrman is Professor of Psychiatry at the Orygen Youth Health Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, The University of Melbourne. She is also Director, WHO Collaborating Centre in Mental Health, Melbourne; Secretary for Publications, World Psychiatric Association; and Regional Vice–President Oceania, World Federation for Mental Health.


Her interests include mental health promotion, the assessment of outcomes and quality of life for people with mental illnesses, the link between mental health and HIV infection, and the delivery of mental health services.


Jane Fisher


Deputy Director and Coordinator of International Programs, University of Melbourne, Australia. 


Marianne Kastrup was Medical Director of the Rehabilitation and Research Centre for Torture Victims, Copenhagen (1997–2001) and is now Head of the Centre Transcultural Psychiatry, Psychiatric. Dept. Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.  She is the Zonal Representative for the WPA and has served on various committees for both the WPA and the European Association of Psychiatry.


Unaiza Niaz is a Consultant Psychiatrist and Psychotherapist who is the Director of The Psychiatric Clinic & Stress Research Center, Karachi.  She is the President & Founder Member of the Pakistan Society of Traumatic Stress Studies, a Life Member of  The Pakistan Psychiatric Society, and was previously Vice President and Secretary General. She is a life member of the World Federation of Mental Health, American Psychiatric Association and a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, London.  She trained at The Royal Free Hospital, the Tavistock Clinic, Hampstead, London and The Johns Hopkins University, USA. Her research interests are Stress management, Women s Issues, Medical Health Policy and Post– Graduate Education.  She has numerous scientific publications in international journals and has authored several books: Emerging Images of Pakistani Women, Stress Management and The Psychosocial Profile of Pakistani Women, published by Karachi University, and a landmark Monograph on Womens Mental Health In Pakistan.  She has also edited Medical Ethics in Contemporary Era and Pakistan Earthquake International Perspectives on Handling Psycho–Trauma. Presently, she is Co–Chair of the WPA Section on Women s Mental Health and an Advisor to the National Commission on the Status of Women Pakistan.


Marta Rondón, assistant professor at Cayetano Heredia University, is a Founder of the Peruvian Association for Women′s Mental Health and was Chair of the Section of Women′s Mental Health of the World Psychiatric Association.  She was the first woman to be President of the Peruvian Psychiatric Association and is a recipient of the Medal of Honor of the Peruvian College of Physicians..  Formerly Director General of the Office for Older People, Ministry of Women and Social Development in Peru, she currently sits on the National Committee on Mental Health and the High Level Commission on Sexual and Reproductive Health in the Peruvian College of Physicians.  Marta works at the Edgardo Rebagliati Martins Hopsital, where she supervises services for chronic psychiatric patients and sits on the hospital′s committee against gender based violence.


Ahmed Okasha is Professor and Director of the WHO Collaborating Center for Training and Research in Mental Health, Institute of Psychiatry Ain Shams University, Cairo. He is President of the Egyptian Psychiatric Association and of the Egyptian Society of Biological Psychiatry, as well as a Past President of the World Psychiatric Association. Professor Okasha is on the Editorial Advisory Board of 20 International Scientific Journals, an Honorary Fellow of The American College of Psychiatrists (2002) and a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians (Edinburgh, 1973) and of the Royal College of Psychiatrists (London, 1973).

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