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Religion and Psychiatry: Beyond Boundaries

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ISBN: 978-0-470-68220-3

November 2009

688 pages

Description
Religion (and spirituality) is very much alive and shapes the cultural values and aspirations of psychiatrist and patient alike, as does the choice of not identifying with a particular faith.  Patients bring their beliefs and convictions into the doctor-patient relationship.  The challenge for mental health professionals, whatever their own world view, is to develop and refine their vocabularies such that they truly understand what is communicated to them by their patients. Religion and Psychiatry provides psychiatrists with a framework for this understanding and highlights the importance of religion and spirituality in mental well-being. 

This book aims to inform and explain, as well as to be thought provoking and even controversial.  Patiently and thoroughly, the authors consider why and how, when and where religion (and spirituality) are at stake in the life of psychiatric patients.  The interface between psychiatry and religion is explored at different levels, varying from daily clinical practice to conceptual fieldwork.  The book covers phenomenology, epidemiology, research data, explanatory models and theories.  It also reviews the development of DSM V and its awareness of the importance of religion and spirituality in mental health.

What can religious traditions learn from each other to assist the patient? Religion and Psychiatry discusses this, as well as the neurological basis of religious experiences.  It describes training programmes that successfully incorporate aspects of religion and demonstrates how different religious and spiritual traditions can be brought together to improve psychiatric training and daily practice.

  • Describes the relationship of the main world religions with psychiatry
  • Considers training, policy and service delivery
  • Provides powerful support for more effective partnerships between psychiatry and religion in day to day clinical care

This is the first time that so many psychiatrists, psychologists and theologians from all parts of the world and from so many different religious and spiritual backgrounds have worked together to produce a book like this one. In that sense, it truly is a World Psychiatric Association publication.

Religion and Psychiatry is recommended reading for residents in psychiatry, postgraduates in theology, psychology and psychology of religion, researchers in psychiatric epidemiology and trans-cultural psychiatry, as well as professionals in theology, psychiatry and psychology of religion

About the Author
Peter J. Verhagen MD, psychiatrist and theologian, Secretary of the World Psychiatric Association (WPA) Section on Religion, Spirituality and Psychiatry, Harderwijk, the Netherlands; Secretary of the WPA Section on Religion, Spirituality and Psychiatry; Secretary of the Dutch Foundation for Psychiatry and Religion

Prof. Herman M. Van Praag, Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry, Groningen, Utrecht, Maastricht Universities, the Netherlands; Chair of the WPA Section on Religion, Spirituality and Psychiatry, New York, USA.

Prof. Juan J. López-Ibor Jr., MD, PhD, Director, Institute of Psychiatry and Mental Health, San Carlos Clinical Hospital, Complutense University of Madrid, Spain

Prof. John Cox, Secretary General, WPA, Geneva, Switzerland; Professor of Psychiatry, University of Gloucestershire, UK

Prof. Driss Moussaoui, Professor of Psychiatry, Ibn Rushd University; co-chair of the WPA section on Religion, Spirituality and Psychiatry, Casablanca, Morocco.  President-Elect of the World Association for Social Psychiatry, Member of the French Academy of Medicine