Psykhe: The Mental Health Crisis and How We Got Here
Mental health has become the health issue that dominates debate above all others, but it remains poorly understood. One in four people will suffer a mental health issue in the course of each year, and most of them will not seek help because of the stigma that still attaches to mental ill health. Suicide rates are growing year on year. But why? Are we in the grip of a modern epidemic? And if so, how did we get here? Psykhe throws new light on the history of mental health, offering a compelling description and analysis of how events from Classical times to the Capitalist Age have by turn shaped, reshaped, advanced, stultified and advanced again the course of human progress in this most difficult of medical disciplines. This is a gripping narrative that discusses not only how these events have defined today's attitudes towards mental ill health, and the modern day services with which we seek to treat it, but also ultimately offers a fresh perspective on one of life’s most fundamental questions—just what does it mean to live well as a human in the 21st century?
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Psykhe: The Mental Health Crisis and How We Got Here
Mental health has become the health issue that dominates debate above all others, but it remains poorly understood. One in four people will suffer a mental health issue in the course of each year, and most of them will not seek help because of the stigma that still attaches to mental ill health. Suicide rates are growing year on year. But why? Are we in the grip of a modern epidemic? And if so, how did we get here? Psykhe throws new light on the history of mental health, offering a compelling description and analysis of how events from Classical times to the Capitalist Age have by turn shaped, reshaped, advanced, stultified and advanced again the course of human progress in this most difficult of medical disciplines. This is a gripping narrative that discusses not only how these events have defined today's attitudes towards mental ill health, and the modern day services with which we seek to treat it, but also ultimately offers a fresh perspective on one of life’s most fundamental questions—just what does it mean to live well as a human in the 21st century?
29.95 In Stock
Psykhe: The Mental Health Crisis and How We Got Here

Psykhe: The Mental Health Crisis and How We Got Here

by R.D.C. Crabtree
Psykhe: The Mental Health Crisis and How We Got Here

Psykhe: The Mental Health Crisis and How We Got Here

by R.D.C. Crabtree

Paperback

$29.95 
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Overview

Mental health has become the health issue that dominates debate above all others, but it remains poorly understood. One in four people will suffer a mental health issue in the course of each year, and most of them will not seek help because of the stigma that still attaches to mental ill health. Suicide rates are growing year on year. But why? Are we in the grip of a modern epidemic? And if so, how did we get here? Psykhe throws new light on the history of mental health, offering a compelling description and analysis of how events from Classical times to the Capitalist Age have by turn shaped, reshaped, advanced, stultified and advanced again the course of human progress in this most difficult of medical disciplines. This is a gripping narrative that discusses not only how these events have defined today's attitudes towards mental ill health, and the modern day services with which we seek to treat it, but also ultimately offers a fresh perspective on one of life’s most fundamental questions—just what does it mean to live well as a human in the 21st century?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781398102712
Publisher: Amberley Publishing
Publication date: 01/01/2021
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

R. D. C. Crabtree has worked at the forefront of the Department of Health's flagship "Improving Access to Psychological Therapies" program for more than 10 years, having led the expansion of IAPT into 36 regions around the UK. He has written about mental health and psychological therapies for the Independent newspaper, and contributed to national forums shaping mental health policy in the UK.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements 7

Foreword Sir Norman Lamb 8

The Breath of Life - A Prologue 11

1 A Modern Epidemic? - A Premise 13

2 The Emancipation of Reason - Mental Health in the Ancient World 27

3 Baying at the Moon - Religion and Mental Health 44

4 The Anatomy of Melancholy - An Enlightenment 66

5 Daggers of the Mind - Mental Health in Wartime 93

6 Asylums and Agony - Institutionalisation and Experimental Treatments 113

7 Industry and Insight - Mental Health and Globalised Capitalism 140

8 Worldwide Worries? - Mental Health in the Digital Age 162

9 Foods for Thoughts - Holistic Health 185

10 Parity of Esteem - The Case for Public Investment, and the Policy Response 206

11 O Brave New World! - A Future 228

Hope - An Epilogue 248

Figures 251

Notes and References 256

Bibliography 269

Index 278

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