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Working with Dual Diagnosis: A Psychosocial Perspective


Working with Dual Diagnosis: A Psychosocial Perspective

Paperback by Hill, Darren (Leeds Beckett University, UK); Penson, William J. (Leeds Beckett University, Leeds); Charura, Divine (Leeds Beckett University, Leeds)

Working with Dual Diagnosis: A Psychosocial Perspective

£33.99

ISBN:
9781137337665
Publication Date:
3 Nov 2015
Language:
English
Publisher:
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:
Bloomsbury Academic
Pages:
192 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 15 - 20 May 2024
Working with Dual Diagnosis: A Psychosocial Perspective

Description

In the UK it is estimated that a third of patients in mental health services have a substance abuse problem, and that half of patients in drug and alcohol services have a mental health problem. Part of Palgrave's Foundations of Mental Health series, this book explores the intertwined issues of substance use and mental health as a social phenomenon and offers a critical, informative guide to understanding dual diagnosis. Written by authors with extensive experience within mental health and drug treatment services, Working with Dual Diagnosis explores areas that are key to understanding the relationship between the two, including: - Models for understanding substance use, mental health and the correlation of complex social and psychological factors - Treatment processes for working with individuals, groups and families and within a community setting - The historical social, political, economic and legislative context of mental health and substance use - Practice implications for dual diagnosis, including how practitioners can work with and promote better treatment, after care and support for those experiencing dual diagnosis issues. Enriched with reflective exercises, case studies and key points, this book will inform all work related to dual diagnosis populations within health, social and criminal justice service, and is an essential text for social work, nursing, occupational therapy and probation students.

Contents

Introduction PART I: HISTORY, POLITICS AND CONCEPTS 1.The historical context of substance use, mental health and dual diagnosis 2. The socio-politics of dual diagnosis; psychiatry, law and economics 3. Key models for understanding dual diagnosis PART II: WORKING IN PRACTICE 4. Working with individuals; the broader picture and getting started 5. Psychosocial interventions 6. Working with groups and families 7. Working in community settings: dual diagnosis and the recovery movement in a community context

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