Sadness or Depression?: International Perspectives on the Depression Epidemic and Its MeaningJerome C. Wakefield, Steeves Demazeux Springer, 2015 M12 21 - 208 páginas The World Health Organization states that depression is the leading cause of disability worldwide, and predicts that by 2030 the epidemic of depression raging across the world will be the single biggest contributor to the overall burden of disease of all health conditions. Yet this gloomy picture masks a number of paradoxes concerning the diagnosis and cultural interpretation of depression that appear to challenge the claimed prevalence rates on which it is based. This book’s essays by some of the world’s leading researchers and scholars on depression explores these anomalies in detail from multidisciplinary and multicultural perspectives, and in doing so reshapes the debate on the nature of depression that is currently under way in the US and abroad. At the book’s core is the exploration from the multiple perspectives of a key dilemma: is the epidemic of depression real or is it just apparent? In particular, could it be the result of criteria laid down in the official American classification system of mental disorders, the DSM, interacting with cultural changes to reshape our view of melancholy, pathologizing what were formerly normal symptoms of grief or intense sadness? The debate over the DSM's conception of depression has an international relevance, with the WHO’s upcoming revisions to its International Classification of Diseases requiring coordination with the DSM. This collection of perspectives has an unprecedented international dimension, as scholars from Europe and around the world join US academics to explore a central and controversial element of contemporary psychiatric diagnosis - and one that has enormous practical implications for the future of mental health care and how we view our emotions. The book’s accessible essays will make it useful to scholars, practitioners, and students across a wide range of disciplines. |
Contenido
| 1 | |
The Current Status of the Diagnosis of Depression | 16 |
The Continuum of Depressive States in the Population and the Differential Diagnosis Between Normal Sadness and Clinical Depression | 29 |
Personal Equation from the Guilty to the Capable Individual | 39 |
Japanese Debates About Work Stress and a New Therapeutic Ethos | 55 |
Evolutionary Psychiatry and Depression | 68 |
Is an Anatomy of Melancholia Possible? Brain Processes Depression and Mood Regulation | 95 |
A Conceptual Sketch in Defence of Some Psychoanalytic Views | 109 |
Shifting the Focus from Depression in Primary Care | 120 |
An Insider View on the Making of the First French National Information Campaign About Depression | 137 |
Whats Lost in Translation? | 157 |
Psychiatrys Continuing Expansion of Depressive Disorder | 173 |
| 205 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Sadness or Depression?: International Perspectives on the Depression ... Jerome C. Wakefield,Steeves Demazeux Sin vista previa disponible - 2019 |
Sadness or Depression?: International Perspectives on the Depression ... Jerome C. Wakefield,Steeves Demazeux Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
affective Agency American Psychiatric Association Andrews and Thomson anhedonia animal models antidepressant anxiety approach argued autonomy behavior bereavement exclusion biological bipolar disorder brain Briffault campaign causal changes clinical clinicians cognitive neuroscience Comorbidity concept context Demazeux eds depres depressive episode depressive illness depressive symptoms diagnosis of depression diagnostic criteria disease Dowrick drugs DSM-IV dysfunction Ehrenberg emotional evolutionary explain factors functioning genetic grief Holtzheimer Horwitz and Wakefield human individual Journal of Psychiatry Kendler low mood major depressive disorder Mayberg mechanism Medicine melancholia mental disorders mental health mental illness models of depression mood disorders mourning National normal sadness Oxford pathological patients perspective philosophy prevalence problems psychoanalysis psychological psychopathology psychotherapy reactions response role rumination schizophrenia Schmitz scientific sion social specific Springer Science+Business Media stress stressors suicide theory therapy tion treatment uncomplicated University Press validity Wakefield workers World Health Organization World Psychiatry
