Health care ethics for psychologists : a casebook /
Saved in:
Author / Creator: | Hanson, Stephanie L. |
---|---|
Edition: | 1st ed. |
Imprint: | Washington, DC : American Psychological Association, ©2005. |
Description: | 1 online resource (ix, 250 pages) |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11152035 |
Table of Contents:
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Values and the Practice of Psychology
- Chapter 1.. Crisis and Emergency Care
- Case 1.1. Do the Rules Still Apply? Crisis Response to 9/11
- Case 1.2. Provider Conflicts in Managing Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
- Case 1.3. Professional Boundaries and the Unwanted Psychologist
- Chapter 2.. Acute Care
- Case 2.1. Managing Documentation in the Medical Record: The Impact of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act Guidelines
- Case 2.2. Truth Telling: The Disclosure of Emotionally Difficult Information
- Case 2.3. Malingering and the Management of Chronic Pain
- Case 2.4. Overriding Treatment Refusals During Early Recovery From Catastrophic Injury
- Chapter 3.. Inpatient Rehabilitation
- Case 3.1. Opportunities and Challenges in Using Nonstandardized Testing
- Case 3.2. The Overwhelmed Psychologist's Responsibility Toward Very Sick Patients
- Case 3.3. Using Placebos and Deception in Treatment
- Case 3.4. When the Team and Family Disagree: Incorporating Family Beliefs and Values Into Treatment
- Case 3.5. Accommodating Questionable Patient Preferences
- Case 3.6. Responding to Mixed Messages About Treatment Refusal (Continuation of the Fergus MacGonagle Series)
- Chapter 4.. Outpatient Services
- Case 4.1. Managing a Patient's Risk-Taking Behavior
- Case 4.2. Resolving Requests for Third-Party Observers
- Case 4.3. Responding to Patients Working the System
- Case 4.4. Return to Work After Catastrophic Injury: Implications of the Americans With Disabilities Act (Conclusion of the Fergus) MacGonagle Series)
- Chapter 5.. Subacute and Long-Term Care
- Case 5.1. Serving the Patient Who Is Totally Incapacitated
- Case 5.2. Difficult Behavior and the Perception of Incompetence
- Case 5.3. Assent in Decision Making and the Role of Same-Sex Partners
- Case 5.4.. Quality of Life and the Right to Die
- References
- Author Index
- Subject Index
- About the Authors