Depression has become the most frequently diagnosed chronic mental illness, and is a disability encountered almost daily by mental health professionals of all trades. "Major Depression" is a medical disease, which some would argue has reached epidemic proportions in contemporary society, and it affects our bodies and brains just like any other disease. Why, this book asks, has the incidence of depression been on such an increase in the last 50 years, if our basic biology hasn't changed as rapidly? To find answers, Dr. Blazer looks at the social forces, cultural and environmental upheavals, and other external, group factors that have undergone significant change. In so doing, the author revives the tenets of social psychiatry, the process of looking at social trends, environmental factors, and correlations among groups in efforts to understand psychiatric disorders.
Political Animals
Rick Shenkman
audiobook8 Keys to Safe Trauma Recovery
Babette Rothschild
audiobookMemoirs Extraordinary Populare Delusions and the Madness Crowds
Charles MacKay
audiobookProust and the Squid : The Story and Science of the Reading Brain
Maryanne Wolf
audiobookHealing Self-Injury
Janis Whitlock, Elizabeth Lloyd-Richardson
audiobookAngst besiegen, Die: Selbstverbesserung durch Geheimdienstmethoden
Frank Hofmann
audiobook6 Denkhüte: Neue Denkschule: Denkhüte von De Bono
Edward De Bono
audiobookLess Than Human
David Livingstone Smith
audiobookThe Secret Letters of a Psychotherapist
Sharlene Sema Raston
audiobookThe Center Cannot Hold
Elyn R. Saks
audiobookDivided Minds
Pamela Spiro Wagner, Carolyn S. Spiro
audiobookThe Art of Witty Banter: Be Clever, Quick, & Magnetic
Patrick King
book