The Locator -- [(title = "Essentials")]

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05763aam a2200517 i 4500
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003 SILO
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008 221103s2023    nyu      b    001 0aeng  
010    $a 2022044057
020    $a 0231207921
020    $a 9780231207928
035    $a (OCoLC)1349566816
040    $a DLC $b eng $e rda $c DLC $d UKMGB $d OCLCF $d YDX $d CNMTR $d TOH $d OCLCO $d ZLM $d SILO
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050 00 $a R154.H337 $b A3 2023
082 00 $a B $a B $2 23/eng/20221117
100 1  $a Hellerstein, David, $e author.
245 14 $a The couch, the clinic, and the scanner : $b stories from three revolutionary eras of the mind / $c David Hellerstein.
264  1 $a New York : $b Columbia University Press, $c [2023]
300    $a xvi, 254 pages ; $c 24 cm
504    $a Includes bibliographical references (pages 235-241) and index.
520    $a "This book traces the history of psychiatry through three revolutionary eras--each exemplified by a different model of the mind--which Columbia psychiatrist David Hellerstein has seen over the course of his decades-long career. Each model was meant to organize the brain's unfathomable complexity in a simplified but compelling way. First, starting at the beginning of the 20th century, came the psychoanalytic model and the accompanying icon of the couch. Until the 1960s and '70s, Freudian psychoanalysts still ruled America; the mind could be liberated through free association, by regression, by interpretation of transference, and by patiently working through neurotic tangles. Then, In January of 1980, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, 3rd edition, the DSM-III, was published by the American Psychiatric Press. It was more than three and a half times the length of the DSM-II, with 83 more diagnoses--free of psychoanalytic ideas and seen by psychoanalysts at the time as a take-out menu of diagnoses and treatments. This era ushered in revolutionary new clinical treatments and medications. And then, in the early years of the 21st Century, Hellerstein's third decade of practice, yet another new dream began to emerge. We now find ourselves living in the era of the whole human genome, of "personalized," or what was soon renamed "precision," medicine, and the visualization of "task-based" brain center activations by a dazzling array of amazing neuroimaging techniques using MRI and PET scanning machines. Not only that, we are at the first stages of trying to tweak our brains' epigenetics and "retuning" aberrant brain circuits by direct current electricity, or profoundly disruptive drug infusions. We are now immersed in a neuroscience revolution in psychiatry. The sixteen stories that make up the book are autobiographical narratives, written from Hellerstein's perspective as a psychiatrist practicing in New York City from the early 1980s to the present day, a physician who spends his time working with patients, doing research, and helping to run clinics and hospitals. He witnessed firsthand these evolutions of the field: from the couch, to the clinic, to the brain scanner. Mindset documents Hellerstein's own internal battles as explorations of the self, full of wonder and angst and occasional surprising new understanding. And of course, Hellerstein's daily adventures center around the innumerable patients a doctor encounters every day, sometimes baffling and frustrating and often inspiring"-- $c Provided by publisher.
505 00 $t Index. $g Part 2. The Clinic, 1985-2000: $t The work: learning to do psychoanalytic psychotherapy, 1980-1984 -- $t Tigers in the night: a therapists own therapy, 1981-1988 -- $t The enchanted garden: psychoanalysis in the psychiatry marketplace, 1985 -- $t Dreams of the insane help greatly in their cure: demolition of the psychoanalytic mothership, 1994 -- $g Part 2. The Clinic, 1985-2000: $t Treating the city: DSM psychiatry in the real world of the city hospital, 1989 -- $t Reinventing the egg: translating the DSM across cultures and languages, 1990-1994 -- $t The red box: digging deep into the DSM, late 1990s -- $t Call: testing the DSM off hours, 1998 -- $t Less with less: stripping the DSM to the essentials or beyond, 1998-2000 -- $t Part 3. The Scanner, 2000-2023: $t Flights into health: learned safety and the new neuropsychiatry, 2000-2007 -- $t Curing families: genes, circuits, and the frontiers of treatment, 2005-2009 -- $t Off-label: revisioning drugs in the age of neuroscience, 1997-2023 -- $t Mind wandering, then and now: new views over three eras, 2005-2023 -- $t Floating brains and magic mushrooms: ancient psychedelics test the progress of psychiatry, 2019 to today -- $t Afterword -- $t References -- $t Index.
600 10 $a Hellerstein, David.
600 17 $a Hellerstein, David $2 fast
650  0 $a Psychiatrists $z New York $z New York $v Biography.
650  0 $a Psychiatry $z New York $z New York $v Anecdotes.
650  0 $a Neuropsychiatry $z New York $z New York $v Anecdotes.
650  0 $a Physician and patient $v Anecdotes.
650  6 $a Psychiatres $z New York $z New York $v Biographies.
650  6 $a Neuropsychiatrie $z New York $z New York $v Anecdotes.
650  6 $a Relations medecin-patient $v Anecdotes.
650  7 $a Neuropsychiatry $2 fast
650  7 $a Physician and patient $2 fast
650  7 $a Psychiatrists $2 fast
650  7 $a Psychiatry $2 fast
651  7 $a New York (State) $z New York $2 fast
655  7 $a Anecdotes $2 fast
655  7 $a Biographies $2 fast
655  7 $a Biography. $2 lcgft
776 08 $i Online version: $a Hellerstein, David. $t Couch, the clinic, and the scanner $d New York : Columbia University Press, [2023] $z 9780231557184 $w (DLC)  2022044058
941    $a 1
952    $l OVUX522 $d 20240619012651.0
956    $a http://locator.silo.lib.ia.us/search.cgi?index_0=id&term_0=5DC7E0482E0111EFA856D47D28ECA4DB

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