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Case Analyses for Abnormal Psychology

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Case Analyses for Abnormal Psychology, Second Edition uses case studies to explore the etiology, biology, and dynamics of psychiatric disorders in the DSM-5. Readers will learn about the new classifications and treatments for disorders while simultaneously reading the personal history of each consumer both before and during the development of each case. Every case ends with a section on the particular disorder presented, as viewed from a biological perspective. This updated edition bridges advances in abnormal psychology and neuroscience in understanding mental illness.

238 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2000

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Mark.
690 reviews9 followers
March 10, 2019
Keeping in mind that this book uses the DSM IV.

For 200 pages capturing 10 disorders, it is pretty good. It lays out symptoms of a case and with some, how it can be ambiguous in which the symptom matches the story. Like in the autism case, we don't get an extreme case for example. I also liked how the authors decided to use a male in the case of BPD, a condition women tend to be diagnosed in greater portion than male. IT is just the little things like changing minor characters that show that things are different than other textbooks I have read. I also liked the biological and psychological approach to seeing each case. Overall it just a great text.
Profile Image for Alice Wardle.
Author 1 book4 followers
August 26, 2023
This book is about trying to recognise symptoms of a mental health condition within the context of someone's life. For example, trying to recognise what disordered eating looks like for an individual isn't as simple as ticking off a list of symptoms, and the same condition doesn't look the same for everyone. Understanding that everyone will not have the same mental health journey is essential, so diagnosis and treatment will look different for everyone. There is not just one way to deal with things. The book also introduces the concept that friends, family, and professionals are also responsible for someone's mental health too.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews