Clinical Psychology Observed

Clinical Psychology Observed

by David Pilgrim (Author), Andy Treacher (Author), Andy Treacher (Author), David Pilgrim (Author)

Synopsis

Clinical psychology has slowly developed as a profession over the last 50 years of so. It has been shaped in response to psychiatry, scientific positivism and the therapeutic monopoly of medicine, as well as the organizational setting of the National Health Service. Clinical psychologists are trained in a professional culture which stresses the primacy of research knowledge and the development of skills. Yet, as David Pilgrim and Andy Treacher insist, it is an eclectic science with no agreed methodology. Consequently, its ability to provide a secure basis for practioners is suspect. "Clinical Psychology Observed" examines this contradictory state of British clinical psychology. It contrasts its confident public persona with its private insecurity and confusion. Throughout the book, this paradox is examined in relation to the cultural history of clinical psychology, its training practices and its responses to the radical changes in health care policy in the 1980s. Finally, the implications of this are discussed in relation to the problems facing practitioners in the future. This book should be of interest to students, lecturers and practioners of clinical psychology, psychiatry, and health policy.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 208
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 07 May 1992

ISBN 10: 0415046327
ISBN 13: 9780415046329

Media Reviews
This volume both challenges and sympathizes with a profession that the authors see as long on theory and short on coherence and consistency in practice. It should offer an interesting critique to those interested in the standards of the profession . ..
- Contemporary Psychology