Oxford Textbook of Migrant Psychiatry 1st edition by Dinesh Bhugra – Ebook PDF Instant Download/DeliveryISBN: 019257048X, 9780192570482
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ISBN-10 : 019257048X
ISBN-13 : 9780192570482
Author: Dinesh Bhugra
Migrant psychiatry is an evolving subdiscipline within cultural psychiatry that deals with the impact of migration on the mental health of those who have migrated and those who work with these groups and provide services to them. Stress related to migration affects migrants and their extended families either directly or indirectly. The process of migration is not just a phase, but leads on to a series of adjustments, including acculturation, which may occur across generations. Factors such as changes in diet, attitudes and beliefs, and overall adjustment are important in settling down and making the individuals feel secure. This period of adjustment will depend upon the individual migrant’s pre-migration experiences, migration process and post-migration experiences, but also upon an individual’s personality, social support and emotional response to migration.
Oxford Textbook of Migrant Psychiatry 1st Table of contents:
Section 1 Background
1. Introduction
2. Geopolitics of migration and refugees
3. Political and institutional determinants of migration policies
4. Prejudice, ethnic discrimination, and double jeopardy in migrants
5. Global cultures as a consequence of globalization of mental health
6. Gender perspectives in migration
7. A psychosocial approach to working with victims of trafficking with means of sexual exploitation
8. The new face of exploited children in Europe
9. Mental health needs of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender migrants
10. Urbanization and its impact on migrant mental health
11. Trauma and migration
12. Collective trauma
Section 2 Pre-migration
13. Mental health issues of child refugees and migrants
14. Vulnerability, psychopathology, and creativity of the children and adolescents of migrants
15. Effects of migration on women’s psychosocial health: focus on the Mediterranean region
16. Experiences of elderly migrants in a new country
17. Families migrating together
18. Psychosocial and mental health impacts of migration on ‘left-behind’ children of international migrant workers
19. Forced migration
20. Out-migration and social capital
21. Micro-migration
22. Disability and forced migration
Section 3 Migration
23. Internal migration
24. General health needs of migrants and refugees
25. Physical migration
26. Physical and psychological resilience and migration
27. Migration governance and mental health
28. Refugees and asylum seekers
29. High-skilled migration and mental health: challenges and solutions
Section 4 Post-migration
30. Sociocultural phenomenology of world migrations
31. The cross-cultural assessment of migrants
32. Refugee and asylum seekers’ experiences
33. Principles for the management of physical and mental health care in migrants
34. Managing relationships and psychotherapy
35. Community-based mental health care and narrative exposure therapy
36. Migrant acculturation and adaptation
37. Cultural bereavement, cultural congruity, and identities
38. Intercultural mediation in mental health care
39. Working with interpreters
40. Migration and mental health care in the European Union
41. Refugees, torture, and dehumanization
42. Refugee, migrant, and asylum seeker experiences: the Balkan perspective
43. Needs of child refugees and economic factors
44. Media setting the agenda: the various shapes of media othering
45. Immigration: migrant perspective
46. Early assessment of mental health and options for documentation of torture in newly arrived asylum seekers
47. Safety for children: how can we support parents and caregivers in reception centres and early phases of resettlement?
48. Women and migration: psychopathology
49. Children and vulnerable groups services
50. Ethics and migrant psychiatry: principles, challenges, and solutions
51. Mental health of refugees in primary care
52. Separate or integrated services?
53. Specialist services: practice
Section 5 Psychotherapeutic techniques
54. Handling cultural differences between patient and clinician
55. Therapeutic skills and therapeutic expectations in the treatment of migrant individuals and their families
56. Psychiatric disorders in refugees and immigrants: treatment goals and planning
57. Psychopharmacology and refugees, asylum seekers, and migrants
58. Psychotherapy and refugees
Section 6 Special issues
59. Intercultural counselling and psychotherapy with new immigrants and refugees
60. Post-traumatic stress disorder in refugee and migrant mental health
61. Race and racism’s impact on mental wellness
62. Psychiatric emergencies in asylum seekers
63. Suicide among refugees: the silent story
64. Acculturation and suicide-related risk among Latin American migrants
65. Resettlement stressors and family factors in refugee child and adolescent psychopathology
66. Identifying service needs
67. Separate services or integrated services
68. An early intervention framework for the emotional health and well-being of unaccompanied minors
69. Transforming identities: meeting the needs of refugee and asylum-seeking children in a child and adolescent mental health service in the National Health Service
70. International medical graduates’ contributions to psychiatry—a historical review
71. Dynamics of international medical graduates’ migration: challenges and opportunities
72. Developing psychiatric services for migrants, refugees, and asylum seekers
73. Use of telepsychiatry for the management of mental health problems in migrants
74. Returning migrants: mental and physical health needs
75. What next?
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