1: Thinking about psychiatry 2: Psychiatric assessment 3: Symptoms of psychiatric illness 4: Neuropsychiatry 5: Schizophrenia and related psychoses 6: Depressive illness 7: Bipolar illness 8: Anxiety and stress-related disorders 9: Eating and impulse-control disorders 10: Sleep-wake disorders 11: Reproductive psychiatry, sexual health, and gender related issues 12: Personality disorders 13: Old age psychiatry 14: Substance misuse 15: Child and adolescent psychiatry 16: Forensic psychiatry 17: Intellectual disability 18: Liaison psychiatry 19: Psychotherapy 20: Legal issues 21: Transcultural psychiatry 22: Therapeutic issues 23: Difficult and urgent situations 24: Useful resources 25: ICD-10/DSM-5 index
Dr Semple graduated in Medicine from Edinburgh University in 1992 and worked in the Neurosciences Department at Dundee Royal Infirmary before starting Psychiatry training on the Lothian Training Scheme. Subsequently he obtained a Wellcome Research Fellowship and afterwards was appointed as a Lecturer in Psychiatry and Honorary Specialist Registrar based at the Royal Edinburgh Hospital. During that time he co-wrote the first edition of the Oxford Handbook of Psychiatry, a text he continues to co-write and co-edit with Dr Roger Smyth. Currently working as a Consultant in General Adult Psychiatry at University Hospital Hairmyres, East Kilbride and an Honorary Fellow of the Division of Psychiatry at Edinburgh, he continues to pursue his clinical and research interests in the areas of neuropsychopharmacology, the management of mood disorders, ECT, disorders of sleep and wakefulness, hallucinations, and psychosis. He was elected to Fellowship of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 2016. Dr Roger Smyth was born and educated in Belfast, Northern Ireland and came to Scotland to study Medicine at the University of Edinburgh. He trained in Psychiatry in South East Scotland. Together with a group of friends and colleagues he wrote the first edition of the Oxford Handbook of Psychiatry. Dr Smyth took up his first Consultant Psychiatrist post in St John's Hospital, Livingston in 2004, and moved to the Department of Psychological Medicine at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh in 2006 to specialise in Liaison Psychiatry.
This is another brilliant addition to the excellent Oxford Handbook
series which seems to go from strength to strength ... this is an
outstanding book that seems to cover a huge amount of territory in
an educational and informative style ... Generally speaking, Oxford
Handbooks are excellent but I would place this book one notch up
and call it superb.
*Dr Harry Brown MBChB, Glycosmedia*
Review from previous edition For the clinicians it is a good read
especially for junior doctors who are on call and need a practical
book to refer to. This book is well-written and well-organised with
a good readable style.
*BMA Book Awards 2014. Highly Commended*
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