Bio-psycho-social obstetrics and gynecology : a competency-oriented approach /
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Imprint: | Cham, Switzerland : Springer, 2017. |
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Description: | 1 online resource |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11271958 |
Table of Contents:
- Preface; Contents; Contributors; Part I: Obstetrics, Gynecology, Fertility and Sexology; 1: A Woman Afraid to Deliver: How to Manage Childbirth Anxiety; 1.1 Introduction and Aims; 1.2 Definition in Lay Terms; 1.3 Didactic Goals; 1.4 Facts and Figures: Definitions, Assessment, and Prevalence; 1.4.1 What Is the Definition of Childbirth Anxiety?; 1.4.2 How Is Childbirth Anxiety Assessed?; 1.4.3 What Is the Prevalence of Childbirth Anxiety?; 1.5 Etiology and Pathogenesis; 1.5.1 Where Does Childbirth Anxiety Come From?; 1.5.1.1 Evolutionary Developed Reaction Tendencies.
- 1.5.2 How Do Anxiety Problems in General Develop?1.5.3 What Makes the Difference Between People Who Develop an Anxiety Disorder and Those Who Do Not?; 1.5.4 What Are the Basic Contributors to the Origin of Anxiety Disorders?; 1.5.5 How Does Specific Phobia Develop?; 1.6 Specific Diagnostic Aspects; 1.6.1 When Does a Woman Screen Positive on the W-DEQ?; 1.6.1.1 Psychometric Criteria; 1.6.2 What Are the Clinical Criteria for Childbirth Anxiety?; 1.6.2.1 Clinical Criteria; 1.6.3 When Does a Woman Have a Childbirth Phobia According to DSM-5?
- 1.6.3.1 Criteria for Phobic CA According to DSM-5 Criteria for Specific Phobia1.6.3.2 The DSM System; 1.6.4 Which Other Mental Problems Are Important to Differentiate from Severe/Phobic Childbirth Anxiety in a Differential Diagnosis for CA?; 1.6.4.1 Differential Diagnosis of CA; 1.7 Clinical Features and Comments; 1.7.1 Patients with Childbirth Anxiety; 1.7.1.1 What Are the Clinical Features of Childbirth Anxiety During Pregnancy?; 1.7.1.2 What Are the Clinical Features of Childbirth Anxiety During Delivery?; 1.7.1.3 What Are the Risk Factors for Childbirth Anxiety?
- Risk Factors and Consequences: Vicious Cycles Everywhere1.7.1.4 How Much Does Childbirth Anxiety Influence the Process of Labor?; 1.7.2 Caregivers' Communication and Collaboration with Women with Childbirth Anxiety; 1.7.2.1 What Can Be Expected from Obstetrical Health-Care Providers in Diagnostic and Assessment Procedures of Severe Childbirth Anxiety?; Diagnostic and Assessment Procedures: For Whom to Carry Through?; 1.7.2.2 What Are the Problems in Disclosure of Severe CA?; 1.8 Specific Therapeutic Aspects.
- 1.8.1 What Methods of Treatment of Childbirth Anxiety Have Been Evaluated Scientifically?1.8.1.1 Treatment of Maternal Anxiety; 1.8.2 What Is the Main Aim for the Treatment of Severe and Phobic Childbirth Anxiety?; 1.8.2.1 Specific Treatment of Severe and Phobic Childbirth Anxiety; 1.8.3 What Are the Ingredients of a CBT Treatment Program for Severe and Phobic Childbirth Anxiety?; 1.9 Critical Reflection and Conclusive Remarks; 1.9.1 Anxiety Disorder; 1.9.2 Content of Thinking; 1.9.3 Communication and Collaboration; 1.9.4 Disease and Patient Management; 1.9.5 Aftercare.
- Part I: Obstetrics, gynecology, fertility and sexology. Chapter 1. A pregnant woman afraid of to deliver: How to manage childbirth anxiety
- Chapter 2. A woman afraid of becoming pregnant again: Posttraumatic stress disorder following childbirth
- Chapter 3. A woman who cannot enjoy her pregnancy: Depression in pregnancy and puerperium
- Chapter 4. New mothers with disturbing thoughts: Treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder and of psychosis in postpartum
- Chapter 5. A woman with a positive prenatal test on trisomy 21: Counseling in prenatal diagnosis
- Chapter 6. Parents who lost their baby: Guiding the mourning process in stillbirths and pregnancy terminations
- Chapter 7. A pregnant woman who could not stop drinking: Management of alcohol abuse during pregnancy
- Chapter 8. A young woman asking for labia reduction surgery: A plea for "vulvar literacy"
- Chapter 9. A woman struggling for control: How to manage severe eating disorders
- Chapter 10. A woman with inexplicable mood swings: Patient management of premenstrual syndrome
- Chapter 11. A woman who suffers always and forever: Management of chronic pelvic pain
- Chapter 12. A woman who has been cut: Female genital mutilation from a global perspective
- Chapter 13. A woman with stress incontinence: Urogenital complaints and psychosexual consequences
- Chapter 14. A couple who cannot conceive: Coping with infertility
- Chapter 15. A young woman facing cancer treatment: Shared decision-making in fertility preservation
- Chapter 16. A couple who considers artificial reproductive techniques: Psychosocially informed care in reproductive medicine
- Chapter 17. A woman who never could have coitus: Treatment of lifelong vaginismus
- Chapter 18. A woman with coital pain: New perspectives on provoked vestibulodynia
- Chapter 19. A woman with changing vulvar anatomy: Sexuality in women with lichen sclerosus
- Chapter 20. A woman complaining of lack of sexual desire: Sexological counseling
- Part 2. Fundamental introduction to the concepts of clinical roles, the meta-competences, and POG competency profiles. Chapter 21. A theoretical and empirical study of the core of the psychosomatic approach to obstetrics and gynecology: Meta-competences, clinical roles, and POG competency profiles
- Part 3. Clinical roles and meta-competences: The building blocks of psychosomatic obstetrics and gynecology
- Chapter 22. Introduction
- Chapter 23. History: A historical perspective on patient education in clinical practice and in medical education
- Chapter 24. Scholar: A scholar who cannot see the woods for the trees: The biosocial model as the scientific basis for the psychosomatic approach
- Chapter 25. Health advocate: An obstetrician in doubt--coping with ethical dilemmas and moral decisions
- Chapter 26. Communicator: The gynecologist who could not convince his patients
- Chapter 27. Collaborator: A midwife who had a conflict with an obstetrician--how to transform "contact tics" into "co tactics"
- Chapter 28. Professional: A sexologist who overstepped the mark--how to handle the therapeutic relationship in psychosocial care
- Chapter 29. Leader: A proof of leadership, dealing with and learning from work-related psychotrauma
- Chapter 30. Medical expert: The resident who passed the ultimate test--the integration of roles during the gynecological examination.