Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 208
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-1-4422-1056-1 • Hardback • June 2011 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
978-1-4422-2401-8 • Paperback • October 2012 • $17.95 • (£13.99)
978-1-4422-1058-5 • eBook • June 2011 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
Dr. Deborah Serani is a psychologist in private practice in New York. She has appeared as an expert on various media outlets including MSNBC.com, MedScape.com, ABC News, Medscape, All You magazine, Newsday, Baby Talk magazine, Chicago Sun-Times, USAToday.com, Wall Street Journal Health Blog, Washington Post Health Blog, HealthCentral.com, and many more. She has also published articles in academic journals.
Chapter 1: My Depression
Chapter 2: Understanding Depression
Chapter 3: Treatments for Depression
Chapter 4: The Inside Track
Chapter 5: Your Depression
Chapter 6: The 5 R's
Chapter 7: Preventing Suicide
Chapter 8: Living with Depression
Chapter 9: Fighting Stigma
Appendix I: High Profile Individuals with Mood Disorders
Appendix II:Resources
Appendix III:Glossary
Her strategies are concrete, concise and compassionate. Ranging from simple tips like being consistent with medication and not skipping scheduled therapy sessions to complex issues such as creating a suicideprevention plan and effectively dealing with stigma.
— Psychology Today
New York psychologist Serani helps patients understand their depression by first understanding what depression is, and then how to navigate the complex system of seeking effective treatment. In the first chapter, Serani shares her own experience with debilitating depression with hopes that her experience 'will serve as an encouraging reminder that depression can be treated.' As she moves into the more scientific sections of the book, she uses examples from her personal and professional experiences to provide more rounded explanations. She understands and acknowledges the reserves people have about using medication and consciously addresses the different treatments with that in mind. The aim of this book is to help patients come to terms with the diagnosis and the attendant stigma attached....Much of the focus is on being proactive and utilizing available resources.
— Publishers Weekly
Psychologist Serani shares her own experience and related research in an effort to help all those suffering from depression to understand the disease and negotiate the labyrinth of health-care options and stigma attached to depression. She advocates knowing one's triggers, avoiding toxic people, staying connected with support systems, and making a plan to thwart suicide attempts. Serani offers validity and help to those who suffer from mood disorders but feel ashamed or don't know where to turn for help. This is a valuable resource with the potential to save lives.
— Library Journal
Serani offers a guide book with a soul. She clearly writes of the trials of major depression and the promise of science. She does so as a gutsy clinical psychologist who shares the wisdom made from her suffering, not just her training. She rarely shrank from the challenges of mental illness however they appeared, which will serve as an inspiration to most readers. Her comments on the roadblocks of stigma remind us that the pain of depression and most mental illness arise not solely from the illness, but from the harsh response society has to people with these disorders...
— Patrick Corrigan, distinguished professor of psychology at the Illinois Institute of Technology
Serani offers a guide book with a soul. She clearly writes of the trials of major depression and the promise of science. She does so as a gutsy clinical psychologist who shares the wisdom made from her suffering, not just from her training. She rarely shrank from the challenges of mental illness however they appeared, which will serve as an inspiration to most readers. Her comments on the roadblocks of stigma remind us that the pain of depression, and most mental illness, arises not solely from the illness, but from the harsh response society has to people with these disorders.
— Patrick Corrigan, distinguished professor of psychology at the Illinois Institute of Technology
As someone who has lost a loved one to suicide, I know the accompanying journey of depression and hopelessness well. I also know the fear of sharing that journey with others. Deborah Serani courageously shares her path of despair to hope and healing with the intent of helping others from what she has learned and experienced. She also does it to continue to break the stigma that needlessly surrounds mental illness. In Living with Depression, she succeeds with her messages of hope. May this book reach the far corners of both people who suffer from mental illness and those who need to understand it.
— Michelle Linn-Gust Ph.D, President, American Association of Suicidology and author of Rocky Roads: The Journeys of Families through Suicide Grief
I found Living with Depression to be not only fascinating but, since the author suffers from depression herself, also compassionate, understanding and informative. Bravo!
— Jessie Close, BringChange2Mind.org
Sometimes, with the best of intentions and efforts, psychological professionals can't get across essential information to their patients. Living with Depression bridges that gap in communication. I wish this book had been around when I first began to deal with depression-and I will still use it as a guidebook in the future. Patients can benefit from the doctor's perspective and doctors can learn from their patients. That both are the same gifted author is a blessing to all who deal with mental illness.
— Delta Burke, Actress