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Oxford Handbook of Addiction Medicine (3 Revised edition)

Assanangkornchai, Sawitri (Professor of Psychiatry, Professor of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, Prince of Songkla University, Hat Yai, Thailand)(Volume editor)Bonomo, Yvonne (Consultant Physician in Addiction Medicine and Adolescent Medicine, Consultant Physician in Addiction Medicine and Adolescent Medicine, Department of Addiction Medicine, St Vincent's Hospital, Melbourne, Australia)(Volume editor)Bowden-Jones, Henrietta (Consultant Psychiatrist in Addictions, Consultant Psychiatrist in Addictions, Imperial College London, London, UK)(Volume editor)Higuchi, Susumu (Director Emeritus, Director Emeritus, National Hospital Organization, Kurihama Medical and Addiction Center, Kanagawa, Japan)(Volume editor)Nutt, David (Professor of Psychopharmacology, Professor of Psychopharmacology, Department of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK)(Volume editor)Poznyak, Vladimir (Head of the Alcohol, Drugs and Addictive Behaviours Unit, Head of the Alcohol, Drugs and Addictive Behaviours Unit, World Health Organisation, Geneva, Switzerland)(Volume editor)Saunders, John (Professor and Consultant Physician in Internal Medicine and Addiction Medicine, Professor and Consultant Physician in Internal Medicine and Addiction Medicine, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia)(Volume editor)Saxon, Andrew (Professor of Psychiatry, Professor of Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, USA)(Volume editor)Strang, John (Director of the National Addiction Centre, Director of the National Addiction Centre, Kings Colleage London, London, UK)(Volume editor)van den Brink, Wim (Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry and Addiction, Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry and Addiction, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, Nertherlands)(Volume editor)
Part of the Oxford Medical Handbooks series
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Psychoactive substance use ranks among the five top risk factors contributing to the global burden of disease.

Substance use disorders can cause, mimic, underlie, or complicate a large number of medical and psychiatric conditions.

In recent years, there has been a rapid increase in non-substance forms of addiction such as gambling, internet gaming, and various other behavioural addictions.

The ability to diagnose addictive disorders and initiate appropriate management is a responsibility for all health professionals. Addiction Medicine, now in its third edition and published in the renowned Oxford Medical Handbook series, is the result of many years' preparation by a group of colleagues who are clinicians, teachers, and researchers in the addictive disorders field.

The handbook is a contemporary, broadly-based, and clinically grounded text that summarises the scientific basis and practice of addiction medicine.

It provides practical guidance on clinical management but with a sound background of pharmacology, neurobiology, psychology, and epidemiology and public health.

It seeks to provide approaches to minimising harm from psychoactive substances and addictive behaviours, both at an individual and a societal level.

The new edition has been expanded greatly. In addition to the behavioural addictions, it covers a broader range of psychoactive substances.

There are new chapters on Screening and brief interventions and on Digital health approaches.

It also continues to be international in scope, with the editors and contributors drawn from over 30 countries worldwide. The handbook is intended as a concise and practical guide for students, trainees, and qualified practitioners of medicine, nursing, psychology, and other health professionals.

In particular, it is designed for students and post-graduate trainees and fellows in addiction medicine, internal medicine, psychiatry, emergency medicine, pain management, gastroenterology, and general medical (family physician) practice.

It is also useful and relevant to nurses, particularly those working as specialists in addictive disorders, clinical psychologists, psychologists and counsellors, and social workers and for staff in multidisciplinary agencies which provide help, support, and treatment for people with addictive disorders. This unparalleled guide contains everything you need to know to assist in the assessment, diagnosis, and clinical management of patients with substance use and related addictive disorders

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Published 01/08/2024
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Product Details
Oxford University Press
0192844083 / 9780192844088
Part-work (fascículo)
01/08/2024
United Kingdom
864 pages, 40 black and white illustrations, and a colour plate section
105 x 185 mm, 424 grams