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Where Inner and Outer Worlds Meet
(Englisch)
Psychosocial Research in the Tradition of George W Brown
Tirril Harris

176,95 €

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Produktbeschreibung

The importance of George Brown's sustained contribution to medical sociology through his longitudinal studies of psychiatric disorder and its relationship to social context is widely recognised. This collection of seventeen chapters exemplifies a particular way of working as a medical sociologist which focuses on the understanding of the meaning of social experiences as the key to an individual's health status. It combines the biographical richness of qualitative analysis and thus reach conclusions on the basis of statistical significance.
The contributors mainly focus on conditions of depression and anxiety, relating these to the meanings including both demographic aspects such as gender, parity, lifestyle, employment, refugee/immigration status, humiliation, entrapment, loss and also more interpersonal stresses such as neglect, abuse and critical or unsupportive relationships.
This is a book which offers a rich treasury of information for all researchers interested in understanding the complex relationship between our inner and outer worlds; it captures the essence of George Brown's unique way of working.

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George Brown and Tirril Harris were the authors of an extremely influencial work published by Tavistock in 1978: The Social Origins of Depression (Tavistock 1978) which created a new research tradition which contributed to better understanding of the causes of depression, especially in women.



1: Introduction to the work of George Brown; I: Social psychiatry and social science; 2: George W. Brown's contribution to psychiatry; 3: Bringing meaning back into social psychiatric research; 4: George W. Brown; II: Measurement of key psychosocial factors in research; 5: Lessons from using semistructured interviews with seriously ill patients; 6: Expressed emotion; 7: Contextual measures and subjective appraisal; III: Model building; 8: Negative life events and family negativity; 9: Towards a dynamic stress-vulnerability model of depression; 10: The timing of lives; 11: The childhood experience of care and abuse (CECA); 12: Gender differences in the experience and response to adversity; 13: The long-term effects of childhood adversities on depression and other psychiatric disorders; 14: Evolved socio-emotional systems and their role in depressive disorders; IV: Psychosocial factors in conditions other than depression; 15: Life stress and bipolar disorder; 16: The study of life events; V: Postillegalscript; 17: Some thoughts on the future of social psychiatry
This volume studies George Brown's work on psychiatric disorder and its relationship to social context.

This volume studies George Brown's work on psychiatric disorder and its relationship to social context.

Klappentext

The importance of George Brown's sustained contribution to medical sociology through his longitudinal studies of psychiatric disorder and its relationship to social context is widely recognized. This volume captures the essence of his way of working.



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