Sign up
Forgot password?
FAQ: Login

Emergency conditions in psychiatry and narcology

Tags list of this thematic category

Requests list of this thematic category

Most active users

B
Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2022. — 233 p. Part of the "What Do I Do Now?: Emergency Medicine" series, Psychiatric Emergencies uses a case-based approach to cover common and important topics in the examination, investigation, and management of psychiatric emergencies. Each chapter provides a discussion of the diagnosis, key points to remember, and selected references for...
  • №1
  • 8,60 MB
  • added
CRC Press, 2018. — 373 p. — ISBN13: 978-1-138-19807-4. If you are reading this, you understand the importance of the specialty of caring for patients with psychiatric needs in an emergency setting. Our clinical experience and mounting evidence of increasing demand suggest that the need for specialized care of patients in emergency departments across the United States is...
  • №2
  • 6,19 MB
  • added
  • info modified
C
Cambridge University Press, 2013. — 322 p. Emergency Psychiatry is designed for health care providers who may manage patients with acute psychiatric problems or wish to better understand the fundamentals of urgent psychiatric conditions. This concise but practical reference focuses on the management of patients who are thought to be suffering from an acute psychiatric ailment...
  • №3
  • 3,34 MB
  • added
  • info modified
D
Humana Press, 2019. — 238 p. — (Current Clinical Psychiatry) — ISBN: 978-3-319-23960-6 This book fills a gap in the existing medical literature by providing a best-practice approach to the evaluation and acute treatment of patients presenting for emergency care with identifiable substance use and/or co-occurring psychiatric disorders. As the first interdisciplinary book to...
  • №4
  • 2,26 MB
  • added
  • info modified
G
2nd edition. — Lippincott, Williams, and Wilkins, 2020. — 634 p. Models and Standards of Patient Care, Research, and Education. Delivery Models of Emergency Psychiatric Care. Boarding of Psychiatric Patients in the Emergency Department: Flow, Throughput, and Systemic Change. Quality Improvement in Emergency Psychiatry: The Path to Better Outcomes and Care Standards. Research in...
  • №5
  • 6,53 MB
  • added
M
Oxford University Press, 2016. — 225 p. — ISBN: 9780190250843 Working in an emergency department as a psychiatrist or mental health clinician requires an ability to gain a patient's rapport, establish a differential diagnosis, assess risk and make disposition decisions in a fast-paced and potentially chaotic setting. Patients may be medically ill, agitated, intoxicated, or...
  • №6
  • 2,63 MB
  • added
  • info modified
N
Springer, 2018. — 282 p. — ISBN: 978-3-319-58258-0 This volume provides an “on-the-go” guide to the most common behavioral emergencies a physician may encounter. Each chapter represents a disease state or symptom cluster and concisely summarizes the disease state, provides background, symptoms and signs, differential diagnoses, and immediate and long-term treatment options. All...
  • №7
  • 3,63 MB
  • added
  • info modified
R
2nd edition. — American Psychiatric Pub, 2015. — 375 p. The second edition of Clinical Manual of Emergency Psychiatry is designed to help medical students, residents, and clinical faculty chart an appropriate course of treatment in a setting where an incorrect assessment can have life-or-death implications. Arranged by chief complaint rather than by psychiatric diagnosis, each...
  • №8
  • 2,58 MB
  • added
  • info modified
T
2nd edition. — Routledge, 2017. — 215 p. There is a need to not only understand psychiatric emergencies in low- and middle-income countries but also to formulate logical and acceptable forms of intervention. This book gives the reader an overview of the kinds of psychiatric emergencies that can occur and the strategies employed to manage these in developing countries. The book...
  • №9
  • 1,03 MB
  • added
  • info modified
Oxford University Press, 2023. — 537 p. — (Primer On). — ISBN: 9780197624005. Psychiatric emergencies are encountered throughout the practice of medicine, in many clinical settings. They may range from a patient expressing suicidal thoughts in an outpatient medical visit to an agitated, threatening patient with psychosis who is acutely intoxicated and brought to the Emergency...
  • №10
  • 12,07 MB
  • added
There are no files in this category.

Comments

There are no comments.
Up