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Pharmacotherapy for psychologists : prescribing and collaborative roles / edited by Robert E. McGrath and Bret A. Moore.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Washington, D.C. : American Psychological Association ; London : Eurospan [distributor], 2010.Edition: 1st edDescription: xv, 256 p. : ill. ; 26 cmISBN:
  • 9781433808005:
  • 9781433808005 (print ed.)
  • 1433808005 (print ed.)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: OriginalDDC classification:
  • 616.89
LOC classification:
  • .P53 2010
Online resources: Also issued in print.
Contents:
Making the case for prescriptive authority / Mark Muse and Robert E. McGrath -- The evolution of training guidelines in pharmacotherapy for psychologists / Linda F. Campbell and Ronald Fox -- The psychopharmacology demonstration project : what did it teach us, and where are we now? / Morgan T. Sammons -- Nuts and bolts of prescriptive practice / Glenn A. Ally -- Ethical considerations in pharmacotherapy for psychologists / Robert E. McGrath and Beth N. Rom-Rymer -- Integration of psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy by prescribing-medical psychologists : a psychobiosocial model of care / Elaine S. LeVine and Elaine Orabona Foster -- Evaluating drug research / Robert E. McGrath -- In the private practice setting : a survey of the experiences of prescribing psychologists / Elaine S. LeVine and Jack Wiggins -- Psychologists in primary care / Alan R. Gruber -- Prescribing for school-aged patients / Bruce K. McCormick -- Prescribing in the public health service / Kevin M. McGuinness and Michael R. Tilus -- Lessons from the trenches : getting laws passed / Robert E. McGrath -- The future of prescribing psychology / Bret A. Moore.
Summary: "This volume provides a snapshot of the professional issues surrounding prescriptive authority, medical collaboration, and practical issues associated with prescribing. It will be useful to those involved in legislative efforts, psychologists who are considering completing the training required to become a medical or prescribing psychologist, and those currently prescribing. It will also be a resource for those who do not decide to pursue prescriptive authority but are interested in becoming better collaborators around medication issues with those who do prescribe. The book comprises four parts. Part I covers the rationale for prescriptive authority (Chapter 1) and key issues in the history of the prescriptive authority movement, including the most recent training guidelines used today (Chapter 2) and the Department of Defense Psychopharmacology Demonstration Project (Chapter 3). More general histories of the prescriptive authority movement are already available elsewhere (see Fox, 2003; McGrath, in press). Part II covers general practice issues, including the challenges of day-to-day pharmacotherapy practice (Chapter 4), ethical considerations of pharmacotherapy (Chapter 5), the integration of psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy (Chapter 6), and the evaluation of drug research (Chapter 7). Part III describes issues related to prescribing in specific settings and with specific populations, including private practice (Chapter 8), primary care clinics (Chapter 9), schools (Chapter 10), and public health agencies (Chapter 11). Finally, Part IV provides ideas for getting prescriptive authority laws passed (Chapter 12) and the future of prescribing psychology (Chapter 13)"--Introduction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).
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APA ebook

IT Carlow ebook

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Making the case for prescriptive authority / Mark Muse and Robert E. McGrath -- The evolution of training guidelines in pharmacotherapy for psychologists / Linda F. Campbell and Ronald Fox -- The psychopharmacology demonstration project : what did it teach us, and where are we now? / Morgan T. Sammons -- Nuts and bolts of prescriptive practice / Glenn A. Ally -- Ethical considerations in pharmacotherapy for psychologists / Robert E. McGrath and Beth N. Rom-Rymer -- Integration of psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy by prescribing-medical psychologists : a psychobiosocial model of care / Elaine S. LeVine and Elaine Orabona Foster -- Evaluating drug research / Robert E. McGrath -- In the private practice setting : a survey of the experiences of prescribing psychologists / Elaine S. LeVine and Jack Wiggins -- Psychologists in primary care / Alan R. Gruber -- Prescribing for school-aged patients / Bruce K. McCormick -- Prescribing in the public health service / Kevin M. McGuinness and Michael R. Tilus -- Lessons from the trenches : getting laws passed / Robert E. McGrath -- The future of prescribing psychology / Bret A. Moore.

"This volume provides a snapshot of the professional issues surrounding prescriptive authority, medical collaboration, and practical issues associated with prescribing. It will be useful to those involved in legislative efforts, psychologists who are considering completing the training required to become a medical or prescribing psychologist, and those currently prescribing. It will also be a resource for those who do not decide to pursue prescriptive authority but are interested in becoming better collaborators around medication issues with those who do prescribe. The book comprises four parts. Part I covers the rationale for prescriptive authority (Chapter 1) and key issues in the history of the prescriptive authority movement, including the most recent training guidelines used today (Chapter 2) and the Department of Defense Psychopharmacology Demonstration Project (Chapter 3). More general histories of the prescriptive authority movement are already available elsewhere (see Fox, 2003; McGrath, in press). Part II covers general practice issues, including the challenges of day-to-day pharmacotherapy practice (Chapter 4), ethical considerations of pharmacotherapy (Chapter 5), the integration of psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy (Chapter 6), and the evaluation of drug research (Chapter 7). Part III describes issues related to prescribing in specific settings and with specific populations, including private practice (Chapter 8), primary care clinics (Chapter 9), schools (Chapter 10), and public health agencies (Chapter 11). Finally, Part IV provides ideas for getting prescriptive authority laws passed (Chapter 12) and the future of prescribing psychology (Chapter 13)"--Introduction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved).

Also issued in print.

Electronic reproduction. Washington, D.C. American Psychological Association 2010 Available via World Wide Web Access limited by licensing agreement s2010 dcunns

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