Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- List of boxes, tables and figures
- List of contributors
- 1 Basic skills and competencies in liaison psychiatry
- 2 The liaison psychiatry curriculum
- 3 Classification and diagnosis
- 4 Capacity and consent
- 5 Psychological reaction to physical illness
- 6 Medically unexplained symptoms
- 7 Alcohol and substance use in the general hospital
- 8 Accident and emergency psychiatry and self-harm
- 9 Perinatal psychiatry
- 10 General medicine and its specialties
- 11 Liaison psychiatry and surgery
- 12 Neuropsychiatry for liaison psychiatrists
- 13 Psycho-oncology
- 14 Palliative care psychiatry
- 15 Sleep disorders
- 16 Weight- and eating-related issues in liaison psychiatry
- 17 Disaster management
- 18 Liaison psychiatry and older people
- 19 Paediatric liaison psychiatry
- 20 Primary care and management of long-term conditions
- 21 Occupational medicine
- 22 HIV and liaison psychiatry
- 23 Sexual dysfunction
- 24 Psychopharmacology in the medically ill
- 25 Psychological treatments in liaison psychiatry
- 26 Research, audit and rating scales
- 27 Service models
- 28 Developing liaison psychiatry services
- 29 Multiple choice questions and extended matching items
- Appendix 1 Specific competencies
- Appendix 2 Learning objectives with assessment guidance
- Index
25 - Psychological treatments in liaison psychiatry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- List of boxes, tables and figures
- List of contributors
- 1 Basic skills and competencies in liaison psychiatry
- 2 The liaison psychiatry curriculum
- 3 Classification and diagnosis
- 4 Capacity and consent
- 5 Psychological reaction to physical illness
- 6 Medically unexplained symptoms
- 7 Alcohol and substance use in the general hospital
- 8 Accident and emergency psychiatry and self-harm
- 9 Perinatal psychiatry
- 10 General medicine and its specialties
- 11 Liaison psychiatry and surgery
- 12 Neuropsychiatry for liaison psychiatrists
- 13 Psycho-oncology
- 14 Palliative care psychiatry
- 15 Sleep disorders
- 16 Weight- and eating-related issues in liaison psychiatry
- 17 Disaster management
- 18 Liaison psychiatry and older people
- 19 Paediatric liaison psychiatry
- 20 Primary care and management of long-term conditions
- 21 Occupational medicine
- 22 HIV and liaison psychiatry
- 23 Sexual dysfunction
- 24 Psychopharmacology in the medically ill
- 25 Psychological treatments in liaison psychiatry
- 26 Research, audit and rating scales
- 27 Service models
- 28 Developing liaison psychiatry services
- 29 Multiple choice questions and extended matching items
- Appendix 1 Specific competencies
- Appendix 2 Learning objectives with assessment guidance
- Index
Summary
The use of psychological treatments for patients presenting with physical health problems has a long history. A Persian physician used exploratory psychotherapy over 1200 years ago to successfully treat a patient's psoriasis, by linking it to conflict with his father (Shafi ' Shafi, 1979). Alexander (1950) was one of the great pioneers of psychosomatic medicine of the 20th century. Although he recognised that the aetiology of disease was multifactorial, he speculated that in a number of diseases (including hypertension, rheumatoid arthritis, peptic ulcer and asthma) psychological factors might be of aetiological importance. The notion that psychological factors may be relevant to either the genesis or the progression of physical illness persists. We now know that there is a strong association between most chronic diseases and psychiatric disorder, especially depression (Katon ' Sullivan, 1990). Increasing awareness of this has led to an upsurge in the literature assessing psychological interventions in this area.
Even though only a minority of patients with physical illnesses meet criteria for psychiatric disorder, psychologically determined consequences of physical illness are common, clinically significant and potentially treatable. Indeed, it has been argued that psychological skills are essential in the management of all physical disorders (Mayou, 2005). Psychological treatments are not only useful for patients who have psychiatric disorder in addition to physical illness but are also beneficial in patients without psychiatric disorder who have difficulties arising from problematic illness beliefs, illness behaviour or adjustment to illness. Not infrequently these distinctions overlap, such as non-epileptic attacks in a patient who has epilepsy, or breathlessness secondary to panic attacks in a patient with asthma.
Psychological therapy has been particularly neglected in older patients, who are most at risk of physical illness and often require longer periods of treatment. However, there is no evidence that they do not respond to psychological treatment and many may benefit (Evans, 2007). The focus of this chapter is on psychological treatments for patients who are physically ill and those who present with medically unexplained symptoms.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Seminars in Liaison Psychiatry , pp. 396 - 412Publisher: Royal College of PsychiatristsPrint publication year: 2012