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Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology
Product information
Author:
Type: Paperback
ISBN: 9781615371525
Date: 10th February, 2022
Publisher: American Psychiatric Association Publishing
Categories
- Psychiatry
Description
The troubling increase in treatment resistance in psychiatry has many culprits:
the rise of biomedical psychiatry and corresponding sidelining of psychodynamic
and psychosocial factors; the increased emphasis on treating the symptoms rather
than the person; and a greater focus on the electronic medical record rather
than the patient, all of which point to a breakdown in the person-centered
prescriber-patient relationship.
Psychodynamic Psychopharmacology
illuminates a new path forward. It examines the psychological and interpersonal
mechanisms of pharmacological treatment resistance, integrating research on
evidence-based prescribing processes with psychodynamic insights and skills to
enhance treatment outcomes for patients who are difficult to treat.
The
first part of the book explores the evidence base that guides how, rather than
simply what, to prescribe. It describes precisely what psychodynamic
psychopharmacology is and why its emphasis on combining the often-neglected
psychosocial aspects of medication with biomedical considerations provides a
more optimized approach to addressing treatment resistance.
Part II delves
into the psychodynamics that contribute to pharmacological treatment resistance,
both when patients' ambivalence about their illness, the medication itself, or
their prescriber manifests in nonadherence and when medications support a
negative identity or are used as replacements for healthy capacities. Readers
will gain basic skills for addressing the psychological and interpersonal
dynamics that underpin both scenarios and will be better positioned to
ameliorate interferences with the healthy use of medications.
The final
section of the book offers detailed technical recommendations for addressing
pharmacological treatment resistance. It tackles issues that include
countertransference-driven irrational prescribing; primitive dynamics, such as
splitting and projective identification; and the overlap between
psychopharmacological treatment resistance and the dynamics of treatment
nonadherence and nonresponse in integrated and collaborative medical care
settings.
By putting the individual patient back at the center of the
therapeutic equation, psychodynamic psychopharmacology, as outlined in this
book, offers a model that moves beyond compliance and emphasizes instead the
alliance between patient and prescriber. In doing so, it empowers patients to
become more active contributors in their own recovery.