2nd Edition

Diagnosis Made Easier, Second Edition Principles and Techniques for Mental Health Clinicians

By James Morrison Copyright 2014

    This book has been replaced by Diagnosis Made Easier, Third Edition, ISBN 978-1-4625-5340-2.

    Introduction
    I. The Basics of Diagnosis
    1. The Road to Diagnosis
    2. Getting Started with the Roadmap
    3. The Diagnostic Method
    4. Putting It Together
    5. Coping with Uncertainty
    6. Multiple Diagnoses
    7. Checking Up
    II. The Building Blocks of Diagnosis
    8. Understanding the Whole Patient
    9. Physical Illness and Mental Diagnosis
    10. Diagnosis and the Mental Status Examination
    III. Applying the Diagnostic Techniques
    11. Diagnosing Depression and Mania
    12. Diagnosing Anxiety, Fear, Obsessions, and Worry
    13. Diagnosing Psychosis
    14. Diagnosing Problems of Memory and Thinking
    15. Diagnosing Substance Misuse and Other Addictions
    16. Diagnosing Personality and Relationship Problems
    17. Beyond Diagnosis: Compliance, Suicide, Violence
    18. Patients, Patients
    Appendix. Diagnostic Principles

    Biography

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    -This book pulled me in, because it is different than most other books on diagnosis, it fills a niche, and the writing style is marvelous....Morrison adopts the role of a friendly tutor, one who has a wealth of clinical experience but assumes that some readers are new to this and that some seasoned clinicians were trained poorly or have developed bad habits that interfere with their capacity to reliably diagnose patients with precision. He writes in a style that is both scientific and professional, but also conversational....This book would be of value to students in training, as the basis for a course on diagnostics, or as a reference honing the skills of experienced clinicians, which is exactly how I used it. This is an exceptional book that must be read and reread because of the wealth of information it contains. (on the first edition)--PsycCRITIQUES, 06/01/2007ƒƒA useful resource for clinicians to learn a systematic approach for arriving at diagnoses....Appropriate for students and those in early postgraduate training, as well as more experienced clinicians endeavoring to teach this material. (on the first edition)--Psychiatric Services, 04/01/2007