Chris Kearney and Tim Trull's ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY AND LIFE: A DIMENSIONAL APPROACH provides you with a concise, contemporary, science-based view of psychopathology that emphasizes the individual first. Featuring clinical cases and real first-person narratives, the text illuminates our understanding that abnormal behavior can be viewed along a continuum. This widely accepted view places the behavior of an individual at the forefront of clinical definition, assessment, and treatment. The book also gives you an understanding of the features and epidemiologies, risk factors and prevention, assessment and treatment, and long-term prognosis and associated stigma of mental disorders. Special sections are devoted to college students, ideas for those who may have certain symptoms of mental disorders, and other consumer-based material -- demonstrating how the subject is personally relevant to you and helping you become an intelligent consumer of mental health information.
It did have a few saving graces, like the dimensional approach, but there were so many issues with this book.
I felt constantly frustrated by the book. It forgot to mention a lot of science out there that the authors must have been unaware of. It spoke of many theories like fact (the DSM, the chemical imbalance theory) and did not bring up important masses of research that challenge it. A good textbook would mention these things.
It was particularly painful to me, after having just taken a developmental psychology class where the textbook was excellent and really did a full a detailed analysis--bringing up research and theoretical discussions I had heard mention in TED Talks and recent research that I saw coming out. However, the authors of THIS book did not gain my trust and did not seem to have all the information. This book needs a major overhaul and serious revision.
I spent a lot of time looking elsewhere to fill in what this book left out.
I give the book two stars, because I don't think the authors had bad intentions, and their wishes to end stigma and see mental health along a spectrum did not go unnoticed by me. However, I think they end up contradicting their good intentions, and I think the problems in this book are actually rather dangerous.
A little simplistic, but an excellent textbook nonetheless. I just wish the access codes for these books were not so horribly expensive! I pay for my own books and this code almost bankrupted me. There was a lot of walking to school and bumming rides off my classmates to save money on gas so I could pay the bills and eat that month. I did like the textbook and I will be keeping it for reference and to let people borrow it.