Foreword Acknowledgments About the Editors & Contributors Introduction Section 1: Systemic Multiple Modes and Levels of Intervention Introduction to Section 1 Chapter 1: Therapy Beyond Walls: The Clinical Psychologist's Multi-level Work in the Psychiatric Ward Chapter 2: The Clinical Psychologist in an Open Inpatient Setting: A Psychoanalytic Perspective Chapter 3: Clinical Psychologists in Australian Inpatient Mental Health Units: Enhancing Effectiveness and Relevance with a Human Rights Focus Chapter 4: Ethical Challenges for Psychologists Providing Inpatient Mental Health Care Chapter 5: The Benefit of Behavior Support Plans in Psychiatric Inpatient Settings Chapter 6: Three Dynamic Roles of the Clinical Psychologist on the Acute Closed Psychiatric Ward Chapter 7: The Development of a Recovery-oriented Tool for Work with Patients in the Closed Forensic Ward Chapter 8: On Trying to Stay Sane in Insane Places: A Personal Account of a Clinical Psychologist's Challenges on the Psychiatric Inpatient Ward Chapter 9: A Path Taken: A Psychologist's Professional Journey within the Psychiatric Inpatient System Section 2: Psychotherapeutic Interventions in the Mental Health Inpatient Setting Introduction to Section 2 Chapter 10: All Brief Therapy is not Created Equal: The Contribution of Psychology to Short-stay Mental Health Inpatient Admissions Chapter 11: Continuity Model of Care: Working Across Acute Inpatient to Community-based Clinical Psychology Chapter 12: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Psychosis on the Inpatient Unit: The Role of the Clinical Psychologist Chapter 13: Psychotherapy in an Inpatient Ward: A Clinical Psychologist’s Use of Psychoanalytic Informed Work with Adult Survivors of Childhood Trauma Chapter 14: Mentalization and Psychotherapy: A Way to Understand Patient Violence on the Psychiatric Inpatient Unit Chapter 15: The Clinical Psychologist’s Work in a Forensic Psychiatry Ward: Building a Transitional Space for Individuals with Mental Disorders who Committed Crimes Section 3: Assessment and Psychodiagnosis in Mental Health Inpatient Settings Introduction to Section 3 Chapter 16: Psychodynamic Psychological Testing in the Mental Health Inpatient Setting: A Way of Listening, Learning, and Holding Patients and Psychotherapists Chapter 17: "Listening to the Music of the Mind": The Uses of Psychological Assessment in the Diagnosis of Psychotic Disorders in a State Psychiatric Center Chapter 18: The Role of Psychological Testing in an Inpatient Psychiatric Setting: A Mentalizing Approach Section 4: Clinical Psychology Internship and Supervision in the Mental Health Inpatient Setting Introduction to Section 4 Chapter 19: A Clinical Psychology Intern's Experience of Training in an Inpatient Unit: No Training Wheels Chapter 20: The Benefits and Challenges of Clinical Psychology Internships in Psychiatric Inpatient Settings Chapter 21: The Most Difficult Lesson: The Impact of Patient Suicide on Training in an Inpatient Psychiatric Hospital Chapter 22: An Intern's Experience on an Acute Closed Ward: "From a Shadow to a Bird": The Psychotherapeutic Process of Mr. B Editors’ Perspectives and Closing Remarks Chapter 23: Weaving with a Relational Thread: The Clinical Psychologist’s Use of Empathy in Work in the Mental Health Inpatient Setting Chapter 24: Concluding Thoughts: Past and Present Trends, Future Directions
Meidan Turel, MA, is a licensed Clinical Psychologist in Israel and Director of psychological services in a public inpatient and outpatient mental health center.
Michael Siglag, PhD, is a Clinical Psychologist with over 30 years of experience working in inpatient civil psychiatric and forensic settings, both in direct service and leadership positions.
Alexander Grinshpoon, MD, PhD, MHA, is a specialist in psychiatry and the Director of a public mental health center in Israel, as well as the head of the psychiatry department in the Rappaport Faculty of Medicine, Technion, Israel Institute of Technology.
"In today’s world of managed care and psychiatric institutions, one
wonders what the role of clinical psychologists is in inpatient
settings. This much-needed book answers this question by bringing
together a collection of chapters written by international experts
with years of inpatient experience. We learn that psychologists
bring their special understanding of the unconscious and their
ability to navigate interdisciplinary teams and to help assuage the
anxiety faced when working with serious mental illness.
Psychological treatment, supervision, testing, and team work are
all discussed in this book, which I recommend to beginners and
experienced clinicians alike."Danielle Knafo, Ph.D., Professor,
Long Island University, and author of Living with Terror, Working
with Trauma: A Clinician’s Handbook "This book presents the many
ways in which psychologists in inpatient settings serve as leaders
in promoting recovery. The focus on developing rich,
person-centered formulations and partnering with individuals served
makes this text a useful resource for psychologists from all
theoretical backgrounds. For the experienced CBT clinician, you’ll
find familiar concepts of collaboration, empathy, and understanding
as they present in the unique context of inpatient care, and you
will also see where these approaches overlap in many ways with
those of our psychodynamic and attachment-oriented colleagues. This
book is written for those like me who have a passion for providing
recovery-oriented and formulation-driven treatment."Ellen Inverso,
PsyD, co-author of the forthcoming book Recovery-Oriented Cognitive
Therapy for Schizophrenia"Thoughtful clinical psychologists, from
six countries and a multitude of perspectives, offer their
reflections and practical suggestions, all based on real
experiences, and a clear commitment to humanizing an often
dehumanizing setting. This will be invaluable for clinical
psychologists all over the world."
Professor John Read, University of East London, editor of ‘Models
of Madness’
"In today’s world of managed care and psychiatric institutions, one
wonders what the role of clinical psychologists is in inpatient
settings. This much-needed book answers this question by bringing
together a collection of chapters written by international experts
with years of inpatient experience. We learn that psychologists
bring their special understanding of the unconscious and their
ability to navigate interdisciplinary teams and to help assuage the
anxiety faced when working with serious mental illness.
Psychological treatment, supervision, testing, and team work are
all discussed in this book, which I recommend to beginners and
experienced clinicians alike."Danielle Knafo, Ph.D., Professor,
Long Island University, and author of Living with Terror, Working
with Trauma: A Clinician’s Handbook "This book presents the many
ways in which psychologists in inpatient settings serve as leaders
in promoting recovery. The focus on developing rich,
person-centered formulations and partnering with individuals served
makes this text a useful resource for psychologists from all
theoretical backgrounds. For the experienced CBT clinician, you’ll
find familiar concepts of collaboration, empathy, and understanding
as they present in the unique context of inpatient care, and you
will also see where these approaches overlap in many ways with
those of our psychodynamic and attachment-oriented colleagues. This
book is written for those like me who have a passion for providing
recovery-oriented and formulation-driven treatment."Ellen Inverso,
PsyD, co-author of the forthcoming book Recovery-Oriented Cognitive
Therapy for Schizophrenia"Thoughtful clinical psychologists, from
six countries and a multitude of perspectives, offer their
reflections and practical suggestions, all based on real
experiences, and a clear commitment to humanizing an often
dehumanizing setting. This will be invaluable for clinical
psychologists all over the world."
Professor John Read, University of East London, editor of ‘Models
of Madness’"This book is something of a landmark, an international
study of the role clinical psychologists play in inpatient
settings, working mainly with people experiencing psychosis." David
Kennard, Retired Clinical Psychologist and Group Analyst, York, UK,
in Clinical psychology in the mental health inpatient setting:
international perspectives, Psychosis."Clinical Psychology in the
Mental Health Inpatient Setting is a welcomed text for practicing
clinicians, regardless of their professional setting or experience
with inpatient populations…Turel, Siglag, and Grinshpoon bring
together a group of exemplary clinical scholars, each of whom makes
a meaningful contribution to the text, just as they have to the
lives of the most severely ill amongst us. As such, Clinical
Psychology in the Inpatient Mental Health Setting is a worthwhile
read." Anthony F. Tasso, Fairleigh Dickinson University, book
review in NJ Psychologist (Winter, 2021, vol 71).
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