Review
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"Essentials of Psychiatric Diagnosis is simply the best book
I’ve read about how to accurately diagnose your patients.
Frances's combination of vast experience, down-in-the-trenches
common sense, and informed skepticism is unique. Whether you’re a
psychiatrist, psychologist, social worker, nurse, crisis
counselor, or any other mental professional, you should
buy this book, read it cover to cover initially, and then keep it
in your office to refer back to frequently. I’m glad this book
had not been published before I wrote my book on the psychiatric
interview, because the competition would have made me choose a
different topic!"--Daniel J. Carlat, MD, Department of
Psychiatry, Tufts University School of Medicine; Founding Editor,
The Carlat Psychiatry Report
"With his clinical expertise, leadership roles in prior DSM
editions, and y skepticism about overdiagnosis and
excessive medication, Frances has crafted a clinical gem. This
clear and concise book describes a sequential assessment process
and provides screening questions, easily remembered prototypic
descriptions, differential diagnostic considerations, and
cautionary notes about diagnostic traps. Frances recognizes the
need for a diagnosis to guide intervention, while steering clear
of diagnostic reification. All clinicians need this book for
frequent reference, and it should be a required text in mental
training programs."--John F. Clarkin, PhD, Personality
Disorders Institute, New York Presbyterian Hospital; Department
of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell Medical College
"This easy-to-read, commonsensical handbook guides mental
clinicians through the thicket of differential diagnosis in
psychiatry. Frances--a thoughtful and effective critic of the
excesses of DSM-5--shows where diagnosis is valid and essential,
and where a premature diagnosis or a diagnostic fad has the
potential to hurt patients. Everyone who uses diagnosis in daily
practice will benefit from the down-to-earth wisdom of this
book."--Joel Paris, MD, Department of Psychiatry, McGill
University, Canada
"A 'must have' for mental professionals. Frances provides
useful, easy-to-understand information about psychiatric
diagnosis and coding for clinicians in all mental
disciplines."--K. Dayle Jones, PhD, LMHC, Mental
Counseling Program, University of Central Florida
"Frances demonstrates an unusual ability to communicate the
tacit knowledge of an expert into understandable concepts and
ideas that will be appreciated by clinicians and students alike.
Elegantly simple screening questions precede each disorder and
cut through the diagnostic murk. Facilitating patient-centered
care, teamwork, and collaboration, this is a comprehensive
diagnostic resource for the whole team."--Margaret
(Peggy) Halter, PhD, APRN, Editor, Foundations of Psychiatric
Mental Nursing; Associate Dean, Dwight Schar College of
Nursing and Sciences, Ashland University
"This volume should head the list of user-friendly guides to
psychiatric diagnosis. Frances draws on his considerable
experience and contributions, such as heading the DSM-IV Task
Force, to produce a work that will be indispensable for primary
care clinicians and all professionals and students in mental
care. The guide contains screening questions, prototypic
case descriptions, ICD-9-CM codes (and ICD-10-CM codes where
feasible), and specific cautionary statements to reduce
diagnostic inflation and raise concerns about aspects of DSM-5.
The material is handled with sensitivity and compassion, with the
patient's best interests always the central consideration. This
book is a welcome arrival at a time when recent trends in
diagnosis are increasingly attracting controversy. I will be
using this excellent guide in my own work and will recommend it
to my students and colleagues."--Adrian Wells, PhD, Division of
Clinical Psychology, University of Manchester, United Kingdom
"Anyone who brings a critical perspective to psychiatric
diagnosis will welcome this book's truly refreshing,
reader-friendly approach. Frances, a well-known, respected
psychiatrist, offers up what is clearly a lifetime synthesis of
wisdom and knowledge on diagnosis. Rejecting the cumbersome
detailing of esoteric diagnostic criteria found elsewhere,
Frances presents a simpler, consumable structure for readers.
Importantly, he includes specific DSM-5-related cautions and
caveats. Social workers will appreciate that Frances begins
discussion of the diagnostic interview with a section called 'The
Relationship Comes First'--and that he argues the client should
actually be part of the diagnostic team. This is good
stuff."--Kia J. Bentley, PhD, LCSW, School of Social Work,
Virginia Commonwealth University
"This uncluttered, visually appealing guide will assist all
primary care physicians in the care of patients with psychiatric
illnesses."--Elizabeth S. White, MD, internist, Settlement
, New York City
"I selected this book as a required text in my master's-level
course on the DSM. This is the best companion to the DSM that I
have found since I began teaching this course. Many of my
students have limited experience with psychiatric assessment and
diagnosis, and find the DSM overwhelming and off-putting. Frances
provides the perfect counterbalance to DSM-5 orthodoxy. His book
is filled with clinical practice wisdom that will benefit
students in their day-to-day work with clients. I expect that
this will be one of the books that students keep on their shelves
well after graduation as they work in the field. Social workers
are the largest provider group of mental care; this
user-friendly resource will help them develop the skills they
need to accurately assess and diagnose."--Mark J. Brenner, PhD,
ACSW, LICSW, Professor and Graduate Program Coordinator, School
of Social Work, Bridgewater State University
"[This work] represents the kind of valuable clinical wisdom
that one accumulates after years of diagnostic
experience....Clinical pearls focus in particular on the fuzzy
boundaries and grey areas between threshold diagnoses and
non-diagnostic problems of living, as well as Dr. Frances's
concerns about diagnostic inflation in psychiatry." (Psychiatric
Times 2013-08-15)
“The book is for anyone interested in psychiatric diagnosis, and
the author specifically mentions that the book will assist busy
primary care doctors to be directed toward an accurate diagnosis.
As a director of behavioral medicine for a family medicine
residency, I see value in the book for physicians as the author
mentions as well that it is a quick reference….I would especially
recommend this work to other behavioral scientists working in
family medicine. It provides some key teaching points for
students and residents….Dr. Frances is not one for superficial
rambling, and he gets to the points that need to be made in this
book….The wisdom that is derived by the experience of a master
clinician in psychiatry comes through its pages.”
(Society of Teachers of Family Medicine 2015-04-06)
“The book is well organized….[It] is useful to school social
workers….Although the new DSM-5 uses ICD10 codes, with the help
of Frances’s book, a school social worker will be able to
recognize codes that may be included on a psychiatrist’s report.”
(School Social Work Journal 2015-04-01)
“This is a very worthwhile book that highlights concerns about
DSM-5 that many will share.”
(Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 2014-06-01)
“This book does not follow the organizational structure found in
the DSM-5. Instead, it presents disorders roughly in the order of
their frequency of being encountered in clinical practice, which
does, in my opinion, make the book more interesting and useful….I
can see using this book as a useful secondary text in teaching
master of social work (MSW) students about using the
DSM….Supplementing…with Frances’s Essentials of Psychiatric
Diagnosis will greatly help in developing a clinical social
worker’s diagnostic skills….We need to learn the DSM-5 and learn
to use it well. Allen Frances’s Essentials of Psychiatric
Diagnosis can be a very useful tool to help us achieve this goal
of professional social work education.”
(Research on Social Work Practice 2013-12-19)
“Much of the value of this book rests not only in its critical
assessment of the DSM-5 but of psychiatric diagnosis in
general….This is an important book. It is concise and readable.
It adds clinical in coupled with many years of experience to
the somewhat dry task of explaining all of the currently ‘in
vogue’ criteria defining mental illnesses. Frances is forthcoming
and candid. Where he sees common sense being utilized, he
provides praise. Where he believes steps have been taken that are
questionable, he clearly provides his input. While one would like
to believe that there are no politics in diagnosis, this book
puts that conception to rest. Frances has succeeded in his goals.
He has taken the very difficult task of ‘shrinking’ the DSM-5
into a focused and readable commentary and explanation. He also
provides the corresponding ICD-10 (International Classification
of Disease) codes that are parallel to the DSM….For many, when
faced with the choice between buying the DSM-5 from the American
Psychiatric Association or buying Frances’s version, buying this
book may be a realistic and, no doubt, less expensive
alternative.” (Child and Family Behavior Therapy 2013-01-04)
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About the Author
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Allen Frances, MD, is a clinician, educator, researcher, and
leading authority on psychiatric diagnosis. He chaired the DSM-IV
Task Force, was a member of the Task Force that prepared
DSM-III-R, and wrote the final version of the Personality
Disorders section in DSM-III. The author of several hundred
papers and more than a dozen books, most recently Saving Normal:
An Insider's Revolt against Out-of-Control Psychiatric Diagnosis,
DSM-5, Big , and the Medicalization of Ordinary Life, Dr.
Frances is Professor Emeritus and former Chair of the Department
of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Duke University.
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