Jason Aronson, Inc.
Pages: 214
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-0-7657-0749-9 • Hardback • December 2009 • $114.00 • (£88.00)
978-0-7657-0751-2 • eBook • December 2009 • $108.00 • (£83.00)
W. Lynn Smith, PhD, ABPN, was an associate clinical professor of anesthesiology at the University of Colorado Health Sciences Center and for more than forty years specialized in the diagnosis and treatment of somatizing syndromes. He founded and operated the first hospital-based neuropsychological laboratories in the United States, where he did considerable research in personality, chronic pain, and psychosomatics.
Patrick W. Conway, DO, MDiv, has more than thirty years of experience in the fields of pastoral ministry and counseling. He has practiced as a psychotherapist in hospital-based psychiatric settings and is certified in the delivery of Dialectical Behavior Therapy.
Jonathan O. Cole, MD, ABPN, was professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and a Senior Consultant at McLean Psychiatric Hospital (Belmont, Massachusetts).
Chapter 1 1: Somatization and the Power of Conventional Wisdom
Chapter 2 2: Somatization and Its Discontents
Chapter 3 3: A View from outside the Box
Chapter 4 4: Ambivalence and Progressive Regression in Somatization
Chapter 5 5: Perception and Multi-Level Perceptual Diagnosis
Chapter 6 6: Dealing with Impasse Resistance
Chapter 7 7: Cognitive Behavioral Treatments of Chronic Somatization
Chapter 8 8: Dialectical Behavior Therapy and Chronic Somatization
Chapter 9 9: The Situational Somatizing Patient in Treatment
Chapter 10 10: Psychopharmacology and Somatization
Chapter 11 11: Death or Transformation
The authors tackle the complexity of somatization head on. Neuroplasticity, ego psychology, existential psychotherapy, and psychopharmacology are all given their due. Treatment recommendations are useful and solid.
— Walter A. Brown, M.D, Brown University and Tufts University School of Medicine
This is a much needed book on a long neglected topic. Somatization is a problem that has been well-described but poorly understood for many years. The book is illuminating. Jonathan Cole's contribution, probably the last words he wrote for publication in his long life, is classic Cole: wise yet playful, cautious yet ready to take action, acknowledging uncertainty yet offering hope. It is so typical of him that his last statement in clinical psychopharmacology, a field he had founded 50 years before with a handful of others, was a thoughtful, provocative, nicely researched little essay concerning an area that few had thought about and about which only a little was known.
— J. Alexander Bodkin, MD, chief of the Clinical Psychopharmacology Research Program, McLean Hospital
Somatization is an underappreciated aspect of medical care. This book addresses the need to weave the science and the art of medicine into a whole. Individuals are a complexity of physiologic and emotional interactions influenced by cultural expectations, societal norms, personal experiences, and spiritual orientation. The authors recognize this truth. This book challenges us to examine professional objectiveness and scientific certainty while remembering that there is a person within the patient that presents to the clinician.
— Bruce P. Bates, DO, Departments of Geriatric Medicine and Family Medicine, University of New England College of Osteopathic Medicine
The book itself is comprised of 11 chapters covering ideas about somatization from every conceivable aspect, whether conventional or unusual. Among those, there is a hankering after dialectical behaviour therapy in the management of chronic somatization. All of the chapters are well-written, clear, and reasonable. There are many discussions of related theoretical and social issues which offer thoughts for consideration in a broader focus. The book is nicely produced and easy to read.
— The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry