Record ID | ia:descriptionspres0000unse |
Source | Internet Archive |
Download MARC XML | https://archive.org/download/descriptionspres0000unse/descriptionspres0000unse_marc.xml |
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LEADER: 02696pam a22002894a 45e0
001 297537
005 20030303094312.0
008 021216s2002 mdu b 001 0 eng
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050 00 $aRC455.2.C4$bD47 2002
049 $aXIMM
245 00 $aDescriptions and prescriptions :$bvalues, mental disorders, and the DSMs /$cedited by John Z. Sadler.
260 $aBaltimore :$bJohns Hopkins University Press,$c2002.
300 $axii, 406 p. ;$c24 cm.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references (p. [363]-395) and index.
505 0 $aCh. 1. Introduction -- Ch. 2. The limits of an evidence-based classification of mental disorders -- Ch. 3. Values, politics, and science in the construction of the DSMs -- Ch. 4. Values and objectivity in psychiatric nosology -- Ch. 5. Survival of the fittest? Conceptual selection in psychiatric nosology -- Ch. 6. Technical reason in the DSM-IV: an unacknowledged value -- Ch. 7. Implications of a pragmatic theory of disease for the DSMs -- Ch. 8. Rethinking normativism in psychiatric classification -- Ch. 9. Evaluation and devaluation in personality assessment -- Ch. 10. Values and the validity of diagnostic criteria: disvalued versus disordered conditions of childhood and adolescence -- Ch. 11. Implications of an embrace: the DSMs, happiness, and capability -- Ch. 12. Why criteria of involuntary action are value laden -- Ch. 13. The hegemony of the DSMs -- Ch. 14. What patients and families look for in psychiatric diagnosis -- Ch. 15. Softened science in the courtroom: forensic implications of a value-laden classification -- Ch. 16. Speaking across the border: a patient assessment of located languages, values, and credentials in psychiatric classification --Ch. 17. Psychotherapists as authors: microlevel analysis of therapists' written reports -- Ch. 18. Clinical and etiological psychiatric diagnoses: Do causes count? -- Ch. 19. Defining genetically informed phenotypes for the DSM-V -- Ch. 20. Values in developing psychiatric classifications: a proposal for the DSM-V -- Ch. 21. Report to the chair of the DSM-VI task force from the editors of Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology, "Contentious and noncontentious evaluative language in psychiatric diagnosis" (Dateline 2010).
650 0 $aMental illness$xClassification$xSocial aspects.
650 0 $aMental illness$xClassification$xMoral and ethical aspects.
630 00 $aDiagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders.
700 1 $aSadler, John Z.,$d1953-
994 $aE0$bXIM