ABSTRACT
Análisis del libro: El crimen y la locura, de Henry Maudsley. Editorial Saturnino: Calleja, Madrid, 1880.
Subject(s)
History, 19th CenturyABSTRACT
Includes appreciations of the work: Shock treatments, psychosurgery and other somatic treatments in psychiatry, by Lothar Kalinowsky and Paul Hoch, Editorial Cientifica Médica, Barcelona, ââ1953.
Subject(s)
Psychiatry , Electroshock , Behavior TherapyABSTRACT
Incluye: La psicosis única (fragmentos) Tomado de: Llopis, B. (1954) Arch. de Neurobiología, 17 (1): 3-41 y 17 (2): 141-63.
Subject(s)
Psychotic Disorders , Humans , History, 20th Century , Psychotic Disorders/diagnosis , PsychopathologyABSTRACT
Incluye el texto: Algo sobre la enajenación mental (1864), de Pedro Mallo.
Subject(s)
Mental Disorders , Psychiatry , Humans , History, 19th CenturyABSTRACT
Incluye breve biografía de Karl Jaspers y comentarios sobre su obra "Psicopatología General", 1a. edición en español, 1951.
ABSTRACT
Includes the original text: On the location of diseases. Galen of Pergamon. pp. 54-57
ABSTRACT
Text fragment and commentary.
ABSTRACT
El texto aborda la doctrina de la seguridad nacional (DSN), la noción de estado militar y el territorio de estado en Argentina. Él muestra el panorama de la salud mental en Argentina antes del golpe de Estado de 1976 comentando sobre el ataque al campo de la salud mental.
Subject(s)
Military Science , Mental Health , History, 20th Century , PoliticsSubject(s)
Psychiatry/history , Schizotypal Personality Disorder , Czech Republic , History, 20th Century , HumansSubject(s)
Anthropology, Cultural , Epidemiology , Psychiatry , Argentina , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , HumansSubject(s)
Psychotic Disorders/history , Child , History, 19th Century , Humans , Italy , Psychiatry/historyABSTRACT
This article describes the consequences in the field of psychiatric knowledge of the political and economic neo-liberalization model than was installed from the beginnings of the 1980s: the rise of a psychiatry based on the use of diagnostic and therapeutic algorithms; the "mathematization" of symptoms through the use of scales; the superespecialization of the psychiatrist; the dissemination of psychiatric knowledge through the reading of papers; the acceptance of the statistical consensus; the preeminence of psychopharmacology; and the consolidation of the notion of "opinion leader".