Try to Remember

Psychiatry's Clash over Meaning, Memory, and Mind

Nonfiction, Health & Well Being, Medical, Specialties, Psychiatry, Psychology
Cover of the book Try to Remember by Paul R. McHugh, Dana Press
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Paul R. McHugh ISBN: 9781932594515
Publisher: Dana Press Publication: November 15, 2008
Imprint: Dana Press Language: English
Author: Paul R. McHugh
ISBN: 9781932594515
Publisher: Dana Press
Publication: November 15, 2008
Imprint: Dana Press
Language: English

In the 1990s a disturbing trend emerged in psychotherapy: patients began accusing their parents and other close relatives of sexual abuse, as a result of false “recovered memories” urged onto them by therapists practicing new methods of treatment. The subsequent loss of public confidence in psychotherapy was devastating to psychiatrist Paul R. McHugh, and with Try to Remember, he looks at what went wrong and describes what must be done to restore psychotherapy to a more honored and useful place in therapeutic treatment.

In this thought-provoking account, McHugh explains why trendy diagnoses and misguided treatments have repeatedly taken over psychotherapy. He recounts his participation in court battles that erupted over diagnoses of recovered memories and the frequent companion diagnoses of multiple-personality disorders. He also warns that diagnoses of post-traumatic stress disorder today may be perpetuating a similar misdirection, thus exacerbating the patients’ suffering. He argues that both the public and psychiatric professionals must raise their standards for psychotherapy, in order to ensure that the incorrect designation of memory as the root cause of disorders does not occur again. Psychotherapy, McHugh ultimately shows, is a valuable healing method—and at the very least an important adjunct treatment—to the numerous psychopharmaceuticals that flood the drug market today.

An urgent call to arms for patients and therapists alike, Try to Remember delineates the difference between good and bad psychiatry and challenges us to reconsider psychotherapy as the most effective way to heal troubled minds.

 

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In the 1990s a disturbing trend emerged in psychotherapy: patients began accusing their parents and other close relatives of sexual abuse, as a result of false “recovered memories” urged onto them by therapists practicing new methods of treatment. The subsequent loss of public confidence in psychotherapy was devastating to psychiatrist Paul R. McHugh, and with Try to Remember, he looks at what went wrong and describes what must be done to restore psychotherapy to a more honored and useful place in therapeutic treatment.

In this thought-provoking account, McHugh explains why trendy diagnoses and misguided treatments have repeatedly taken over psychotherapy. He recounts his participation in court battles that erupted over diagnoses of recovered memories and the frequent companion diagnoses of multiple-personality disorders. He also warns that diagnoses of post-traumatic stress disorder today may be perpetuating a similar misdirection, thus exacerbating the patients’ suffering. He argues that both the public and psychiatric professionals must raise their standards for psychotherapy, in order to ensure that the incorrect designation of memory as the root cause of disorders does not occur again. Psychotherapy, McHugh ultimately shows, is a valuable healing method—and at the very least an important adjunct treatment—to the numerous psychopharmaceuticals that flood the drug market today.

An urgent call to arms for patients and therapists alike, Try to Remember delineates the difference between good and bad psychiatry and challenges us to reconsider psychotherapy as the most effective way to heal troubled minds.

 

More books from Psychology

Cover of the book Socially Awkward: Overcome Shyness and Social Anxiety by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book 放下的智慧:不是放下需求,而是放下貪求 by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book Treatment of Depression in Adolescents and Adults by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book Functional Analytic Psychotherapy by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book Estrogens and Brain Function by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book Handbook of Psychology, Behavioral Neuroscience by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book Einsatz von E-Learning in der pflegerischen Fachweiterbildung by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book La Dialectique freudienne (1) by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book The Proper Pirate by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book Beauty Sick by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book Brief History of Schizophrenia by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book Man & His Fellowmen by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book Modeling Intraindividual Variability With Repeated Measures Data by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book Meaning and the Growth of Understanding by Paul R. McHugh
Cover of the book Strange Son by Paul R. McHugh
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy