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New Hope for People with Bipolar Disorder : Your Friendly, Authoritative Guide to the Latest in Traditional and Complementary Solutions, Including: Pr ... Depression & Manic-Depressive ... (New Hope)  
Author: Jan Fawcett, et al
ISBN: 0761530088
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


Alan Schatzberg, M.D., Professor and Chairman, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University
This easy-to-read book demystifies the illness and teaches without scaring. A real addition to mental health literature!


Review
Discover Exciting New Treatments For Bipolar Disorder


Arthur Petacque, investigative reporter, 1974 Pulitzer Prize-winner
A magnificent book deserving the highest marks! Profoundly engrossing, comprehensive, and its uniqueness is its message of "hope."


Ada Kahn, Ph.D., author, of Stress A-Z Sourcebook for Facing Everyday Challenges
Well-documented, solid medical information, and useful tips on self-awareness, relationships, overcoming stigma. Find empathy, compassion, optimism.


Martin Keller, M.D., Professor and Chairman, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Brown University
Creative, authoritative, state-of-the-art; from three perspectives, will profoundly impact the lives of patients and their families.


Review
Discover Exciting New Treatments For Bipolar Disorder


Book Description
Discover Exciting New Treatments For Bipolar Disorder
Now you can maintain control of your bipolar disorder and begin enjoying life again—today! This book dispels the myths and fears surrounding bipolar disorder. It offers compassionate, practical, and immediate guidance for anyone affected by this disorder. Inside, world-renowned experts present important, life-altering advances, including:
·The causes, symptoms, and patterns of bipolar disorder
·New medications
·The latest psychiatric findings
·Cutting-edge treatment models
·Complementary therapies that work
·Effective and practical tools for parenting your bipolar child
·And much more!
"This easy-to-read book demystifies the illness and teaches without scaring. A real addition to mental health literature!" —Alan F. Schatzberg, M.D., professor and chairman, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University
"This creative, authoritative, state-of-the-art book is an enormously valuable tool in dealing with depression. Written from three unique perspectives, it is certain to profoundly impact the lives of patients and their families." —Martin Keller, M.D., professor and chairman, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Brown University


From the Author
Comments by: Jan Fawcett, M.D. This book was originally Nancy Rosenfeld's idea. A book from the perspectives of a patient, a psychiatrist and a psychologist seemed like a good idea, especially a book that attacked stigma and educated people. Fred Goodwin, M.D., who wrote the forward for the book, was bluntly critical after reading the initial copy, but Nancy was able to accept his critique and persist in making the changes he advised. Without Fred's careful reading and blunt criticism, the book could not have succeeded. The book offers *hope* on several levels. First, one does not need to be defined by his or her illness. There need be no shame in having bipolar disorder. Knowledge about the illness and its treatment will enable one to find effective treatment. New treatment methods have increased our capacity to treat the illness. New research showing that the brain changes in response to learning holds out the possibility that new learning techniques (such as cognitive therapy and other methods yet to be developed) will modify the course of the illness in the future. Knowledge is power--so hopefully this book will contribute to each individual's ability to cope with bipolar disorder. *Stigma* is based on ignorance and fear. Successful treatments, new research, successful outcomes and the communication of these outcomes--as you will find in our book--will reduce stigma. We discuss *new findings* of the occurrence of bipolar disorders in twins, families and adopted children of bipolar parents who have been reviewed and present a strong case for a genetically transmitted vulnerability which is brought out by environmental stresses. The search for the identification of specific genes for bipolar disorder and the problem presented by multiple genes is discussed in the book. Finally, we cover some of the possible mechanisms of the illness suggested by effects of various medications.


From the Inside Flap
Discover Exciting New Treatments For Bipolar Disorder
Now you can maintain control of your bipolar disorder and begin enjoying life again—today! This book dispels the myths and fears surrounding bipolar disorder. It offers compassionate, practical, and immediate guidance for anyone affected by this disorder. Inside, world-renowned experts present important, life-altering advances, including:
·The causes, symptoms, and patterns of bipolar disorder
·New medications
·The latest psychiatric findings
·Cutting-edge treatment models
·Complementary therapies that work
·Effective and practical tools for parenting your bipolar child
·And much more!
"This easy-to-read book demystifies the illness and teaches without scaring. A real addition to mental health literature!" —Alan F. Schatzberg, M.D., professor and chairman, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University
"This creative, authoritative, state-of-the-art book is an enormously valuable tool in dealing with depression. Written from three unique perspectives, it is certain to profoundly impact the lives of patients and their families." —Martin Keller, M.D., professor and chairman, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Brown University


From the Back Cover
Discover Exciting New Treatments For Bipolar Disorder


About the Author
Jan Fawcett, M.D., is the Stanley G. Harris Professor and Chairman of the Department of Psychiatry at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center in Chicago, helped to found the National Depressive and Manic-Depressive Association (National DMDA), and is a mental health consultant for The Oprah Winfrey Show.
Bernard Golden, Ph.D., is a psychologist and professor at the Illinois School of Professional Psychology, Chicago.
Nancy Rosenfeld, a bipolar-disorder survivor herself, is the author of two other books, including Just As Much a Woman.


Excerpted from New Hope for People With Bipolar Disorder by Jan Fawcett M.D., Bernard Golden Ph.D., Nancy Rosenfeld, Frederick K. Goodwin. Copyright © 2000. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved
FOREWORD Bipolar illness has long been a source of fascination in the mental health field. The fascination stems from the dramatically different states of mania and depression, which are alternating yet integral components of the same illness and yet often occur simultaneously; the sudden and dramatic processes by which intense depression becomes mania literally overnight, as if a switch had been turned on; the challenge to understand how the same drug (lithium) can bring mania down and lift depression up; and finally, the paradox that in bipolar disorder, arguably the most genetic and therefore the most biological of all the mental illnesses, the psychosocial environment appears to activate the genetic vulnerability, converting it into a lifelong illness. These features are ample reason for the growing interest among mental health professionals and brain scientists, but what of the recent surge in interest among the general public? To understand this we might turn to another fascinating character of the illness: For many bipolar patients, the dark cloud of the illness is leavened by silver linings--creativity, intelligence, and drive. As a result, the bipolar spectrum is a more frequent phenomenon among those in the public eye: artists, performers, writers, composers, and charismatic leaders. Of course, this has long been true. So why the explosion of public interest now? The answer, I believe, is both complex and simple. Decades of research investment, principally by the National Institute of Mental Health and the pharmaceutical industry, have yielded effective treatments for many people with bipolar illness, which means there are hundreds of thousands of bipolar patients leading successful and productive lives. In so doing, each of them sends a powerful and destigmatizing message, especially if they are in the public eye. Not surprisingly, popular books have been the major vehicle increasing public interest, thereby expanding the market for more books. So far, what's out there falls into one of two categories: books by professionals and books by a patient or a family member. With the appearance of this book, a new genre has been established--a close collaboration between a bipolar patient and doctors. Jan Fawcett, one of the two doctors collaborating on this book, is one of the world's leading authorities on depression and bipolar disorder. The result of this unique collaboration? First, it is a book that vibrates with the flesh and blood of real people--principally, coauthor Nancy Rosenfeld and her story, supplemented by detailed stories and quotes from well-known people with the illness. Nancy at moments seems to jump off the pages, right into your heart. At the same time, the reader is treated to a scientifically sophisticated discussion of bipolar illness--its genetics, biology, and psychology along with its psychosocial impact and pharmacological and psychotherapeutic treatments. There is no wall between the author/patient and her two coauthors/doctors. The way her story and her reflections are woven with the scientific and professional material paints a compelling portrait of the patient as a full collaborator in advancing the understanding and treatment of her illness. This itself is an important message for the public to absorb. The book delivers another powerful message, both explicitly and implicitly, that patients need not be defined by their illness. Every one of them is a unique person with their own personality, life experience, strengths, and weaknesses. The authors send this message by using bipolar illness as a springboard to examine various aspects of the human condition--from suggestions for managing stress, advice about sexual happiness, and optimum experience ("flow," or total involvement in life) to strategies for enhancing self-awareness and achieving job satisfaction to a nicely accessible explanation of how cognitive psychotherapy works. While venturing into these broader areas, the book remains true to its primary focus on the key issues in bipolar disorder: its genetic and biological basis; how psychosocial stress can alter its course; the problems of substance abuse, self-stigmatization, and compliance; the impact of the illness on family, friends, and career; and, of course, state-of-the-art treatment strategies. The authors are especially to be commended for giving particular emphasis to childhood bipolar disorder and to the issue of suicide, each of which is assigned its own chapter. Only recently has it begun to dawn on our field that the conventional wisdom that bipolar disorder rarely occurs in childhood is a myth. Likewise, for decades, the field of suicidology, spearheaded predominately by sociologists, overlooked the fact that the great majority of suicides occur in the context of a major psychiatric disorder, principally major depression and bipolar illness. In my opinion, Jan Fawcett is our field's leading authority on suicide and the author of the most definitive study of the clinical features of depression that can predict this tragic outcome. Having this information greatly increases the chance of preventing suicide. In addition, new hope that this ultimate tragedy can be averted comes from a recent review of 28 separate reports involving more than 16,000 patients. The review concludes that the suicide rate among bipolar patients treated with lithium is six to eight times lower than it is among bipolar patients not on lithium. This is the first large-scale demonstration in psychiatry that a specific treatment can actually save lives, and it's appropriately noted in this book. A final note. It's fair to ask how this unique collaboration effort came about and how it so clearly succeeded. I have a one-word answer: Nancy. Her boundless, almost hypomanic energy and enthusiasm were the engines, and her vision was the glue. So, Nancy's "silver linings" made it happen. What better way to teach the public about what's possible for people with bipolar disorder who have the courage to get into treatment and stick with it, working to improve their physical and emotional health every day.




New Hope for People with Bipolar Disorder

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Now you can maintain control of your bipolar disorder and begin enjoying life again—today! This book dispels the myths and fears surrounding bipolar disorder. It offers compassionate, practical, and immediate guidance for anyone affected by this disorder. Inside, world-renowned experts present important, life-altering advances, including:

The causes, symptoms, and patterns of bipolar disorder
New medications
The latest psychiatric findings
Cutting-edge treatment models
Complementary therapies that work
Effective and practical tools for parenting your bipolar child
And much more!


"This easy-to-read book demystifies the illness and teaches without scaring. A real addition to mental health literature!" —Alan F. Schatzberg, M.D., professor and chairman, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University

"This creative, authoritative, state-of-the-art book is an enormously valuable tool in dealing with depression. Written from three unique perspectives, it is certain to profoundly impact the lives of patients and their families." —Martin Keller, M.D., professor and chairman, Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Brown University

SYNOPSIS

Two to three million American children and adults all have one thing in common -- they live with a disabling disorder, a devastating, sometimes life-threatening and vastly misunderstood illness. In New Hope for People With Bipolar Disorder, Dr. Jan Fawcett, a nationally renowned expert in this field, has included the latest state-of-the-art psychiatric findings and treatment models in his multidimensional approach to expel the myths and fears surrounding this illness. Covering treatment options -- including drugs, nutrition, psychotherapy, diet, and lifestyle changes, the authors address the subject clinically and personally, offering compassionate and insightful suggestions for everyone affected by the disease. With the goal of enlightening the general public, New Hope for People With Bipolar Disorder explores the stigma of mental illness and how it obscures correct diagnosis, medical strategies and risk factors for the prevention of suicide, effective and practical tools for parenting the bipolar child, and the causes, symptoms, patterns, and especially, treatments, of bipolar disorder. This book intelligently and sensitively gives people who have the disease -- and their families -- hope and encouragement for living productive and meaningful lives.

This book is the collaborative effort of three people, each of whom has approached the subject of bipolar disorder from a distinct vantage point. Nancy Rosenfeld, a woman who lives with bipolar disorder; Jan Fawcett, the renowned psychiatrist and psychopharmacologist; and Bernard Golden, who is a clinician and professor of psychology.

     



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