Psychiatric ethics is an excellent framework in which to examine social changes in the field of psychiatry over the past 25 years, changes which are dramatic in nature and profound in impact. The Oxford Handbook of Psychiatric Ethics is the most comprehensive treatment of the field in history, with global coverage of this important field.
John Z. Sadler, M.D. is currently a Professor of Psychiatry and Clinical Sciences and the Daniel W. Foster, M.D. Professor of Medical Ethics at The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, Texas. Dr. Sadler directs the Division of Ethics in the Department of Psychiatry and the Program in Ethics in Science and Medicine institution-wide. During his career at UT Southwestern, Dr. Sadler has provided clinical ethics consultation for 25 years and research ethics consultation for eight years. He is a co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry (2013), co-editor, with K.W.M Fulford, of the journal Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology (Johns Hopkins University Press), coauthor with Jennifer Radden of The Virtuous Psychiatrist (OUP, 2010) and author of Values and Psychiatric Diagnosis (OUP 2005). Werdie (C.W.) van Staden is Nelson Mandela Professor of Philosophy and Psychiatry at the University of Pretoria, South Africa, with a clinical psychiatry attachment at Weskoppies Hospital. He serves as editor-in-chief of the South African Journal of Psychiatry; and editor for Philosophy Psychiatry & Psychology; Philosophy, Ethics and Humanities in Medicine; and the International Journal of Person Centered Medicine. He is chairperson of the Faculty of Health Sciences Research Ethics Committee (IRB). He founded and directs postgraduate programmes in Philosophy & Ethics of Mental Health, chairs the committee for residency training in psychiatry, provides clinical training in general adult psychiatry for medical students and psychiatrists, and directs the health ethics training in the School of Medicine. KWM (Bill) Fulford is a Fellow of St Catherine's College and Member of the Philosophy Faculty, University of Oxford; and Emeritus Professor of Philosophy and Mental Health, University of Warwick Medical School. His previous posts include Honorary Consultant Psychiatrist, University of Oxford, and Special Adviser for Values-Based Practice in the Department of Health, UK. Bill has led on a number of key academic and administrative developments in the philosophy of psychiatry and has published widely in this field, including Moral Theory and Medical Practice, co-author of The Oxford Textbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry, and Lead editor of The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry. He is Lead Editor for the Oxford book series International Perspectives in Philosophy and Psychiatry and Founder Editor with John Sadler of the international journal Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology (PPP).
Show morePsychiatric ethics is an excellent framework in which to examine social changes in the field of psychiatry over the past 25 years, changes which are dramatic in nature and profound in impact. The Oxford Handbook of Psychiatric Ethics is the most comprehensive treatment of the field in history, with global coverage of this important field.
John Z. Sadler, M.D. is currently a Professor of Psychiatry and Clinical Sciences and the Daniel W. Foster, M.D. Professor of Medical Ethics at The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, Texas. Dr. Sadler directs the Division of Ethics in the Department of Psychiatry and the Program in Ethics in Science and Medicine institution-wide. During his career at UT Southwestern, Dr. Sadler has provided clinical ethics consultation for 25 years and research ethics consultation for eight years. He is a co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry (2013), co-editor, with K.W.M Fulford, of the journal Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology (Johns Hopkins University Press), coauthor with Jennifer Radden of The Virtuous Psychiatrist (OUP, 2010) and author of Values and Psychiatric Diagnosis (OUP 2005). Werdie (C.W.) van Staden is Nelson Mandela Professor of Philosophy and Psychiatry at the University of Pretoria, South Africa, with a clinical psychiatry attachment at Weskoppies Hospital. He serves as editor-in-chief of the South African Journal of Psychiatry; and editor for Philosophy Psychiatry & Psychology; Philosophy, Ethics and Humanities in Medicine; and the International Journal of Person Centered Medicine. He is chairperson of the Faculty of Health Sciences Research Ethics Committee (IRB). He founded and directs postgraduate programmes in Philosophy & Ethics of Mental Health, chairs the committee for residency training in psychiatry, provides clinical training in general adult psychiatry for medical students and psychiatrists, and directs the health ethics training in the School of Medicine. KWM (Bill) Fulford is a Fellow of St Catherine's College and Member of the Philosophy Faculty, University of Oxford; and Emeritus Professor of Philosophy and Mental Health, University of Warwick Medical School. His previous posts include Honorary Consultant Psychiatrist, University of Oxford, and Special Adviser for Values-Based Practice in the Department of Health, UK. Bill has led on a number of key academic and administrative developments in the philosophy of psychiatry and has published widely in this field, including Moral Theory and Medical Practice, co-author of The Oxford Textbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry, and Lead editor of The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry. He is Lead Editor for the Oxford book series International Perspectives in Philosophy and Psychiatry and Founder Editor with John Sadler of the international journal Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology (PPP).
Show moreSection One: Introduction
1: John Z. Sadler, K.W.M. Fulford, and Cornelius Werendly van
Staden: Introduction - Why an Oxford Handbook of Psychiatric
Ethics?
2: Jennifer Radden: Unique Ethical Challenges for Psychiatric
Practice
3: Cynthia Geppert and Peter J. Taylor: What Troubles
Psychiatrists: How Psychiatrists View Ethical Dilemmas
4: David Crepaz-Keay, K.W.M. Fulford and Cornelius Werendly van
Staden: Putting both a person and people first: interdependence,
values-based practice and African Batho Pele as resources for
co-production in mental health
Section Two: People Come First
5: Jason M. Thompson: The Dignity of the Psychiatric Patient
6: Wilma Boevink: First-person account of ethics in relation to
recovery from mental illness
7: Peter Lehmann: Are users and survivors of psychiatry only
allowed to speak about their personal narratives?
8: Matt Reynolds: 5150: On Unethical Privacy
9: Susanne Petermann and Stephen Weiner: Stephen Weiner, Patient in
the mental health system
10: Peter K. Chadwick: Was the Treatment of my Psychosis Fair and
Just?
11: Jan Verhaegh: The necessity of understanding
12: Roberta Payne: Translation and ethics in psychiatry
13: Dieter Du Plessis: Access Denied: Dieter's Struggle to live in
the World(s) of Others
14: Dahlia Virtzberg-Rofe' and Tzviel Rofe': Freedom of choice of
hospital for psychiatric admissions: A first person and advocacy
account from Israel
15: Pamela Marsh: Timely endings and the ethics of 'being
heard'
Section Three: Specific Populations
16: Michael Koelch, Ulrike M.E. Schulze, Jörg M. Fegert: Child and
adolescent mental health care
17: Jennifer Clegg and Jo Jones: Intellectual disabilities:
Expanding the field of vision
18: Anna Brandon, Geetha Shivakumar, and Anne Drapkin Lyerly:
Pregnant women
19: Jack Drescher: Ethical issues in treating LGBT patients
20: Timothy F. Murphy: Ethical aspects in the care of intersex
patients
21: Nancy Potter and Jay Englehart: Ethical issues in the treatment
of dangerous psychiatric patients
22: Allison K. Zoromski, Steven W. Evans, Heather Davis Gahagan,
Verenea J. Serrano, and Alex S. Holdaway: Ethical and contextual
issues when collaborating with educators and school mental health
professionals
23: James Strain and Rosamond Rhodes: Medical-surgical psychiatry
and medical ethics
24: David Crepaz-Keay: Peer support
25: Julian Hughes: Ethical issues in older patients
Section Four: Philosophy and Psychiatric Ethics
26: Jenifer Booth: Pre-Modern ethics, authoritative narratives, and
the tribunal
27: Brent Michael Kious: Rawls' Theory of Justice and
psychiatry
28: Cornelius Werendly van Staden and K.W.M. Fulford: The indaba in
African Values-based Practice: Respecting Diversity of Values
without Ethical Relativism or Individual Liberalism
29: Giovanni Stanghellini and René Rosfort: The patient as
autonomous person: Hermeneutical phenomenology as a resource for an
ethics for psychiatrists
30: Grant Gillett and Claire Amos: The discourse of clinical ethics
and the maladies of the soul
31: Lubomira Radoilska: Autonomy in psychiatric ethics
32: George Graham: Identity and agency: Conceptual lessons for the
psychiatric ethics of patient care
33: Jillian Craigie and Lisa Bortolotti: Rationality, diagnosis and
patient autonomy in psychiatry
34: Tom L. Beauchamp: The theory, method, and practice of
principlism
35: Jennifer Radden: Virtue-based psychiatric ethics
36: Nancy Nyquist Potter: Feminist psychiatric ethics in the 21st
century and the social context of suffering
37: Dominic Sisti and David Brendel: Philosophical pragmatism in
psychiatric ethics
38: Sridhar Venkatapuram: Utilitarian psychiatric ethics
39: John Z. Sadler: Values-based psychiatric ethics
Section Five: Religious Contexts of Psychiatric Ethics
40: Mohammed Abouelleil Rashed: Islamic perspectives on psychiatric
ethics
41: Ronald Pies: Jewish and Rabbinic perspectives on psychiatric
ethics
42: Emilio Mordini: Roman Catholic perspectives on psychiatric
ethics
43: Cornelius Werendly van Staden: A reformational Christian
overview on suffering, guilt, failures, and related issues in
psychiatry
44: Joseph John Loizzo: Buddhist perspectives on psychiatric
ethics
45: Ruiping Fan, Zhengrong Guo, and Michael Wong: Confucian
perspectives on psychiatric ethics
46: Santosh K Chaturvedi: Religious, spiritual, and cultural
aspects of psychiatric ethics in Hinduism
Section Six: Social Contexts of Psychiatric Ethics
47: Gerald N. Grob: A moral/ethical history of American
psychiatry
48: Robert van Voren and Rob Kreukens: Political abuse of
psychiatry
49: Chris Heginbotham: Ethics and values of commissioning mental
health services
50: Jakki Cowley: Advocacy, ethics, and values in mental health
51: Buddhika Lalanie Fernando and Athula Sumathipala: Ethics of
public mental health in developing societies
52: Louis Charland: Contagion, identity, misinformation: Challenges
for psychiatric ethics in the age of the Internet
53: Nancy Nyquist Potter and Jennifer Radden: "Belonging bulimia":
Ethical implications of eating disorders as group contagions
54: Michael Arribas-Ayllon: Genetic counseling in psychiatry
55: Azgad Gold: Conflicts of interest in clinical practice
56: Omar Sultan Haque, Alicia Lu, Daniel Wu, Lisa Cosgrove, and
Harold J. Bursztajn: Curing financial conflicts of interest in
psychiatric professional organizations
Section Seven: Ethics in Psychiatric Citizenship and the Law
57: Rebecca Anne Wehrly and Adam Brenner: The psychiatrist as
community member
58: Steven Moffic and James Sabin: Ethical leadership for
psychiatry
59: Stephen H. Dinwiddie: Communication with mass media
60: KWM Fulford, Sarah Dewey and Malcolm King: Values-based
involuntary seclusion and treatment: Value pluralism and the UK's
Mental Health Act 2007
61: Andrew Howie and Alan Rosen: Ethical approaches to dealing with
impaired health practitioners
62: Sean Z. Kaliski: The Professional Role of the Forensic
Psychiatrist: a tale of two (or more) loyalties
63: Gwen Adshead: Ethical issues in secure psychiatric settings
64: Michael Robertson: Ethical issues in working with criminal
offenders
Section Eight: Ethics of Psychiatric Research
65: Mona Gupta: Ethical issues in evidence-based psychiatry
66: Paul P. Christopher and Laura B. Dunn: Psychiatric research
ethics: Informed consent, capacity, and voluntarism
67: Ekaterina Pivovarova and Philip Candilis: Safety monitoring and
withdrawal of psychiatric research participants
68: Janet Louisa Wallcraft: Service user involvement in research:
Ethics and values
69: Hope Ferdowsian: Ethical problems concerning the use of animals
in psychiatric research
70: Stacy Pritt and Shari G. Birnbaum: Animal Welfare
Considerations and Ethical Oversight of the Use of Animals in
Psychiatric Research
71: Josephine Johnston and Naomi Scheinerman: Protecting Research,
Preserving Trust: The Importance of Managing Industry Relationships
in Psychiatric Research
Section Nine: Ethics and values in psychiatric assessment and
diagnosis
72: John Z. Sadler: Ethics and values in diagnosing and classifying
psychopathology
73: K.W.M. Fulford, Lu Duhig, Julie Hankin, Joanna Hicks and
Justine Keeble: Values-based Assessment in Mental Health: The 3
Keys to a Shared Approach between Service Users and Service
Providers
74: Michael Gottlieb, Travis Whitfill, and Heidi Rossetti:
Psychological testing and assessment
75: Robyn Bluhm, Malgorzata Raczek, Matthew Broome, and Matthew B.
Wall: Ethical issues in brain imaging in psychiatry
Section Ten: Ethics and values in psychiatric treatment
76: Cornelius Werendly van Staden: Consent to psychiatric treatment
and incapacity
77: Douglas W. Heinrichs: Model-based Science and the Ethics of
Ongoing Treatment Negotiation
78: Glen O. Gabbard, Holly Crisp-Han, and Gabrielle S. Hobday:
Professional boundaries in psychiatric practice
79: Dan Stein and Anton A van Niekerk: Ethics of
psychopharmacology
80: Walter Glannon: Psychiatric Neuroethics I: Deep Brain
Stimulation and Lesioning
81: Walter Glannon: Psychiatric Neuroethics II: Less invasive
techniques
82: Jennifer Hansen: A Virtue-based Approach to Neuro-enhancement
in the Context of Psychiatric Practice
83: Gwen Adshead: Ethical Issues Common to All Therapies
84: Adam Brenner and J. Christian Cather: Using a "Virtues"
Approach to Ethical Challenges in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy
85: R.D. Hinshelwood: Projection and introjection: The uses of
paternalism, and its abuses
86: Debbie Sookman: Ethical practice of cognitive-behavior
therapy
87: Gayla Margolin, Lauren Spies Shapiro, and Kelly Miller: Ethics
in couple and family psychotherapy
88: Hanna Pickard: Stories of recovery: The role of narrative and
hope in overcoming PTSD and PD
89: Jill Thistlethwaite and Wendy Hawksworth: Handling ethical
dilemmas in multidisciplinary teams: an interprofessional
values-based approach
90: Gonzalo Perez-Garcia: Ethics of telepsychiatry
91: Evan DeRenzo and Philip Candilis: Ethics and the paradigm shift
in schizophrenia: The early intervention story
92: Julian Hughes and Clive Baldwin: Ethics in relation to
caregiving and caregivers in mental health
93: Robert L.H. Clements, Wilma Boevink, Juna Lea Cizman, Cheryl
Forchuk, Luljeta Pallaveshi, and Abraham Rudnick: Ethics in
relation to recovery from mental illness
94: Duff R. Waring: Patient responsibilities in a psychiatric
healing project
John Z. Sadler, M.D. is currently a Professor of Psychiatry and
Clinical Sciences and the Daniel W. Foster, M.D. Professor of
Medical Ethics at The University of Texas Southwestern Medical
Center in Dallas, Texas. Dr. Sadler directs the Division of Ethics
in the Department of Psychiatry and the Program in Ethics in
Science and Medicine institution-wide. During his career at UT
Southwestern, Dr. Sadler has provided clinical ethics consultation
for 25 years and
research ethics consultation for eight years. He is a co-editor of
The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry (2013), co-editor,
with K.W.M Fulford, of the journal Philosophy, Psychiatry, &
Psychology (Johns Hopkins University Press), coauthor with Jennifer
Radden of The Virtuous Psychiatrist (OUP, 2010) and author of
Values and Psychiatric Diagnosis (OUP 2005). Werdie (C.W.) van
Staden is Nelson Mandela Professor of Philosophy and Psychiatry at
the University of Pretoria, South Africa, with a clinical
psychiatry attachment at Weskoppies Hospital. He serves as
editor-in-chief of the South African Journal of Psychiatry; and
editor for Philosophy Psychiatry & Psychology;
Philosophy, Ethics and Humanities in Medicine; and the
International Journal of Person Centered Medicine. He is
chairperson of the Faculty of Health Sciences Research Ethics
Committee (IRB). He founded and
directs postgraduate programmes in Philosophy & Ethics of Mental
Health, chairs the committee for residency training in psychiatry,
provides clinical training in general adult psychiatry for medical
students and psychiatrists, and directs the health ethics training
in the School of Medicine. KWM (Bill) Fulford is a Fellow of St
Catherine's College and Member of the Philosophy Faculty,
University of Oxford; and Emeritus Professor of Philosophy and
Mental Health, University of Warwick
Medical School. His previous posts include Honorary Consultant
Psychiatrist, University of Oxford, and Special Adviser for
Values-Based Practice in the Department of Health, UK. Bill has led
on a number of key
academic and administrative developments in the philosophy of
psychiatry and has published widely in this field, including Moral
Theory and Medical Practice, co-author of The Oxford Textbook of
Philosophy and Psychiatry, and Lead editor of The Oxford Handbook
of Philosophy and Psychiatry. He is Lead Editor for the Oxford book
series International Perspectives in Philosophy and Psychiatry and
Founder Editor with John Sadler of the international journal
Philosophy, Psychiatry, &
Psychology (PPP).
The OHPE functions best as an encyclopedia of topics in psychiatric
ethics and will serve as a valuable reference tool for scholars and
practitioners... The OHPEs chapter on Ethics and Values in
Diagnosing and Classifying Psychopathology renders a timeless
ethical issue in a new light with a thought-provoking discourse
that includes the social consequences of receiving a diagnosis, and
the unique self-illness ambiguity of mental disorders that sets
them apart from other medical afflictions.
*Dr. Cheung, Psychiatric Times*
This book is broad-ranging, timely and relevant, and covers an
important subject in great depth.
*Martin Guha, Reference Reviews, Vo. 30, No. 3, 2016*
If you think of ethics as something stodgy, the new Oxford Handbook
of Psychiatric Ethics will be an eye-opener. Changes in treatment,
science, and society have produced a slew of new ethical challenges
for psychiatrists. These range from the uses of deep brain
stimulation and the impact of evolving concepts of psychiatric
genetics, to the role of peer support in treatment. Embracing all
this and much more, this comprehensive treatment of ethics in
psychiatry will be an irreplaceable resource for psychiatric
clinicians and researchers trying to find secure ethical footing in
a rapidly changing world.
*Paul S. Appelbaum, MD Dollard Professor of Psychiatry, Medicine &
Law, Columbia University USA*
Clinicians practicing psychiatry and other mental health fields
confront numerous ethical and values issues daily. In this
extremely comprehensive Handbook Sadler, Van Staden and Fulford
provide 94 welcome chapters authored by some of todays foremost
philosophers, academic physicians, and clinicians who focus on the
many points at which clinical care and ethical matters interface.
This authoritative volume deserves widespread reading and pondering
by those concerned that ethical issues are well considered in
psychiatric assessment, treatment, and research, aiming for and
that patients treated by psychiatrists and other mental health
clinicians receive the highest levels of ethically-informed care
scholarship and values-based practice possible.
*Joel Yager, MD Professor, University of Colorado School of
Medicine and Chair, Council on Quality Care, American Psychiatric
Association*
This comprehensive treatment of ethics in psychiatry covers the
whole gamut from the philosophical to the pragmatic; from
traditional, ethnic, religious value systems to modern citizenship;
from the doctors to the patients perspectives, and more. It is a
must have that can serve multiple purposes as a practice guide, a
reference book, and a life time companion in our endeavors to think
more deeply about ethics and practice.
*Louise Sundararajan, Ph.D. Ed.D. Past President, Society for
Humanistic Psychology*
Despite the impressive advances in neuroscience, psychiatry, more
than any branch of medicine, is embedded in and constantly shaped
by culture. This comprehensive two-volume book provides a scholarly
approach to understanding the multifaceted interaction between
medical science and society as they both evolve. It will stand as
an indispensable resource for many years.
*Stuart J. Youngner, MD, Professor of Bioethics and Psychiatry,
Case Western Reserve University*
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