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This book emphasizes the need for global standards in the methods, procedures, and techniques of the scientific assessment of PTSD and psychological injuries. Focusing equally on theoretical concepts, culturally valid assessment methods, and cultural adaptation in trauma and resilience, 29 experts present the cutting edge of research and strategies in this book. In addition, extended, global case-examples illustrate an informative range of symptom profiles, comorbid conditions, and coping skills, as well as secondary traumas that can occur in asylum seekers. Coverage also highlights professional concerns, from training and competency issues to the challenges of translating assessment into treatment.
Approaches the issue of PTSD from a global viewpoint Emphasizes the needs for global standardization of methods, procedures, and techniques of the scientific assessment of PTSD and psychological injuries Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Auteur
John P. Wilson is a Professor of Psychology and Fulbright Scholar at Cleveland State University. He is co-founder and past president of the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies and the author of 10 books; 40 chapters and many articles on PTSD.
Catherine So-kum Tang graduated from the University of North Texas with a Ph.D. in Clinical Psychology. She is a Professor in the Department of Psychology at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. She was the former Director of the Graduate Studies in clinical Psychology and Gender Studies Program, and is currently Director of the new postgraduate program in trauma-related studies. She has published widely in international journals on violence against women, family violence, clinical aspects of social issues, AIDS/HIV prevention, and trauma psychology.
Contenu
Theoretical And Conceptual Considerations In The Cross-Cultural Assessment Of Psychological Trauma.- The Lens of Culture: Theoretical and Conceptual Perspectives in the Assessment of Psychological Trausma and PTSD.- CulturalEcological Perspectives on the Understanding and Assessment of Trauma.- Ethnomedical Best Practices for International Psychosocial Efforts in Disaster and Trauma.- Assessing Trauma Across Cultures from a Multigenerational Perspective.- Refugee Assessment Practices and Cultural Competency Training.- Wrestling with the Ghosts from the Past in Exile: Assessing Trauma in Asylum Seekers.- Assessment Methods.- Assessment of PTSD and Psychiatric Comorbidity in Contemporary Chinese Societies.- Culture and the Assessment of Trauma in Youths.- The Peritraumatic Dissociative Experiences Questionnaire An International Perspective.- The Impact of Event Scale: Revised.- Posttraumatic Stress in Asylum Seekers from Chechnya, Afghanistan, and West Africa: Differential Findings Obtained by Quantitative and Qualitative Methods in Three Austrian Samples.- Trauma And Cultural Adaptation.- The Cross-Cultural Assessment of Dissociation.- Mass Psychological Trauma and PTSD: Epidemic Illusion?.- Assessment of Trauma for Aboriginal People.- Combined Psychosocial and Pharmacological Treatment of Traumatized Refugees.- Western Psychiatry and Difficulty: Understanding and Treating Hmong Refugees.