The Wiley-Blackwell Handbook of Mood Disorders (2nd Ed.)
Wiley Clinical Psychology Handbooks Series

Coordinator: Power Mick

Language: English

178.87 €

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544 p. · 18.3x25.2 cm · Hardback
The Wiley-Blackwell Handbook of Mood Disorders, 2/e reflects the important and fast-changing advancements that have occurred in theory and practice in unipolar and bipolar mood disorders. There is no other current reference that gathers all of these developments together in a single book
  • Every chapter is updated to reflect the very latest developments in theory and practice in unipolar and bipolar mood disorders
  • Includes additional chapters which cover marital and family therapy, medical disorders and depression, and cross-cultural issues
  • Contributions are from the world's leading authorities, and include psychiatrists and clinical psychologists with experience in both research and in practice
  • Focuses on innovations in science and clinical practice, and considers new pharmacological treatments as well as psychological therapies

About the Editor vii

List of Contributors ix

Foreword to First Edition by Kay Redfield Jamison xi

Part I Unipolar Depression 1

1 The Classification and Epidemiology of Unipolar Depression 3
Paul Bebbington

2 Biological Models of Unipolar Depression 39
Anthony J. Cleare and Lena J. Rane

3 Cognitive Models and Issues 69
David A. Grant, Peter J. Bieling, Zindel V. Segal, andMelanie M. Cochrane

4 Psychosocial Models and Issues in Major Depression 87
Antonia Bifulco

5 The Developmental Psychopathology of Depression 107
Katie A. McLaughlin, Louisa C. Michl, and Kate L. Herts

6 Biological Treatment of Mood Disorders 143
Charlotte L. Allan, Anya Topiwala, Klaus P. Ebmeier,David Semple, and Douglas Steele

7 CBT for Depression 173
Mick Power

8 Interpersonal Psychotherapy of Depression 193
John C. Markowitz

9 Marital Therapy for Dealing with Depression 215
Guy Bodenmann and Ashley Randall

10 Depression: The Challenges of an Integrative, Biopsychosocial Evolutionary Approach 229
Paul Gilbert

Part II Bipolar Depression 289

11 Classification and Epidemiology of Bipolar Disorder 291
Sameer Jauhar and Jonathan Cavanagh

12 Neurobiological Theories of Bipolar Disorder 311
Karine Macritchie and Douglas Blackwood

13 Psychological Theories of and Therapies for Bipolar Disorder 325
Kim Wright

14 Further Integration of Patient, Provider, and Systems Treatment Approaches in Bipolar Disorder: Where New Evidence Meets Practice Reality 343
Sagar V. Parikh and Sidney H. Kennedy

15 Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Bipolar Affective Disorders 361
Matthias Schwannauer

16 Self-Management and the “Expert Patient in Bipolar Disorders” 383
Anne Palmer

Part III General Issues 397

17 Current Approaches to the Assessment of Depression 399
Dave Peck

18 Suicide and Attempted Suicide 413
Andrew K. MacLeod

19 Vulnerability to Depression in Culture, Mind, and Brain 433
Yulia E. Chentsova-Dutton and Andrew G. Ryder

20 Mood Disorders and Chronic Physical Illness 451
Somnath Chatterji and Nicole Bergen

21 Depression in Older People: Cognitive Behavior Therapy, Evidence and Practice 463
Ken Laidlaw

22 Summary and New Directions 485
Mick Power

Author Index 495

Subject Index 523

Mick Power is Professor of Clinical Psychology at the Universities of Edinburgh and Tromsø in Norway. For many years he has worked with the World Health Organization to develop a measure of quality of life, the WHOQOL that is now in widespread use. He is also the author of, amongst others, Handbook of Evidence-based Psychotherapies (Wiley, 2007), Cognition and Emotion: From Order to Disorder, 2/e (with Tim Dalgleish, 2008) and Adieu to God - Why Psychology Leads to Atheism (Wiley, 2012). He is a founding editor of the journal Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy.