Introduction
Section 1: Context and Perspective
1. History of Imprisonment, Bruce Arrigo and S. Lorén Trull
2. Mental Illness Management in Corrections, Charles L. Scott and
Brian Falls
3. Formative Case Law and Litigation, Mohamedu F. Jones
4. Human Rights, Jamie Fellner
5. From the Inside Out: Offender Perspectives, Brad Bogue and
Robert L. Trestman
Section 2: Organization, Structure and Function of Correctional
Institutions
6. Jails and Prisons, Joel Dvoskin and Melody C. Brown
7. Working Inside The Walls, Bruce C. Gage,
8. Ethics in Correctional Mental Health, Philip J. Candilis and
Eric D. Huttenbach
9. Communication in Correctional Psychiatry, Dean Aufderheide
10. Funding of Correctional Healthcare and Its Implications, Robert
L. Trestman
Section 3: Patient Management Processes
11. Mental Health Screening and Brief Assessments, Michael P.
Maloney, Joel Dvoskin, and Jeffrey L. Metzner
12. Interviewing in Correctional Settings, Li-Wen Lee
13. Population Management, Robert L. Trestman and Kenneth L.
Appelbaum
14. Disciplinary Infractions and Restricted Housing, Mary Perrien
and Maureen L. O'Keefe
15. Community Re-Entry Preparation/ Coordination, Henry A.
Dlugacz
Section 4: Common Management Issues
16. Management of Sleep Complaints in Correctional Settings,
Bernice S. Elger
17. Detoxification or Supervised Withdrawal, Rebecca Lubelczyk
18. Adjustment Disorders, Graham D. Glancy and Stefan R.
Treffers
19. Transition of Pharmacology From Community To Corrections,
Robert L. Trestman
20. Diagnostic Review and Revision, Sohrab Zahedi
21. Diversion Programs and Alternatives To Incarceration, Merrill
Rotter and Virginia Barber-Rioja
22. Levels of Care, Jeffrey L. Metzner and Kenneth L. Appelbaum
23. Evaluation of Malingering In Corrections, James L. Knoll,
IV
24. Intoxication and Drugs in Facilities, Jason D. Ourada and
Kenneth L. Appelbaum
Section 5: Emergencies
25. Crisis Assessment and Management, Reena Kapoor
26. Use of Restraint and Emergency Medication, Gerard Gagne
27. Hospitalization, Michael A. Norko, Craig G. Burns and Charles
Dike
Section 6: General Pharmacology Issues
28. Formulary Management/ Pharmacy and Therapeutics Committees,
Robert H. Berger, Robyn J. Wahl and M. Paul Chaplin
29. Hypnotic Agents and Controlled Substances, Ingrid Li, Arthur
Brewer, and Rusty Reeves
30. Medication Administration and Management: Directly Observed
Therapy, Catherine M. Knox
31. Prescribed Medication Abuse: Limitless Creativity, Anthony
C.Tamburello
Section 7: Disorders and Syndromes
32. Diagnostic Prevalence and Comorbidity, Stuart D.M.Thomas,
33. Psychotic Disorders, Johann Brink and Todd Tomita
34. Mood Disorders, Jayesh Kamath and Ajay Shay
35. Anxiety Disorders Including Post Traumatic Stress Disorder
(PTSD), Catherine F. Lewis
36. Personality Disorders, Sundeep Virdi and Robert L. Trestman
37. Attention Deficit Disorders, Kenneth L. Appelbaum and Kevin A.
Murphy
38. General Medical Disorders With Psychiatric Implications, Erik
J. Garcia and Warren J. Ferguson
39. Psychiatric Aspects of Pain Management Psychiatric Assessment
and Management of Chronic Pain in Correctional Settings, Robert L.
Trestman
Section 8: Psychotherapeutic Options
40. Applicability of the Recovery Model in Corrections, Debra A
Pinals and Joel T. Andrade
41. Individual Psychotherapy, James L. Knoll, IV
42. Group Psychotherapy, Shama Chaiken and Brittany Brizendine
Section 9: Suicide Risk Management
43. Suicide Risk Management, Kerry C. Hughes and Jeffrey L.
Metzner
Section 10: Treatment of Addictions
44. Programming, Patrece Hairston and Ingrid A Binswanger
45. Dual Diagnosis: Interventions Designed to Address Substance
Abuse, Mental Health, and Criminal Offending, Faye S. Taxman
46. Pharmacotherapy For Substance Use Disorders Within Correctional
Facilities, Sarah E. Wakeman and Josiah D. Rich
47. Transition to The Community, Jamie P. Meyer and Frederick L.
Altice
Section 11: Aggression, Self-Injury and Misconduct
48. Aggression, Robert L. Trestman
49. Self-Injurious Behaviors, Kenneth L. Appelbaum
50. Behavior Management Plans, Henry Schmidt III and Andre M.
Ivanoff
Section 12: Distinct Populations
51. Gender-Specific Treatment, Catherine F. Lewis
52. Developmental Disabilities, Barbara E. McDermott
53. Traumatic Brain Injury, Pamela M. Diamond
54. A Roadmap for Providing Psychiatric Services to Incarcerated
Veterans: A Challenging Subspecialty, James F. DeGroot
55. Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgendered Inmates, Randi
Kaufman, Kevin Kapila and Kenneth L. Appelbaum
56. Juveniles, Carl C. Bell
57.Aging Prisoners and the Provision of Correctional Mental Health,
Kristin G. Cloyes and Kathryn A. Burns
58. Clinical and Legal Implications of Gangs, Annette L. Hanson
59. Treatment of Incarcerated Sex Offenders, Fabian M. Saleh,
Albert J. Grudzinskas and H. Martin Malin
60. Cultural Competence, Reena Kapoor and Ezra E. H. Griffith
Section 13: Special Topics
61. Forensic Issues, Erik J. Roskes and Donna Vanderpool
62. Psychological Testing, Ira K. Packer and Tasha R. Phillips
63. Standards and Accreditation for Jails, Prisons, and Juvenile
Facilities, Joseph V. Penn
64. Hunger Strikes, Emily A. Keram
65. Responding to Prisoner Sexual Assaults: Successes, Promising
Practices, and Challenges, Robert W. Dumond and Doris A. Dumond
66. Systems Monitoring and Quality Improvement, Jeffrey L.
Metzner
67. Leadership, Training and Educational Opportunities, Raymond F.
Patterson
68. Role of Clinical Trainees, Charles L. Scott and Brian J.
Holoyda
69. International Perspectives and Practice Differences, Lindsay D.
G. Thomson
70. Correctional Mental Health Research and Program Evaluation,
Nancy Wolff
71. The Future of Correctional Psychiatry: Evolving and Recommended
Standards, Kenneth L. Appelbaum, Jeffrey L. Metzner and Robert L.
Trestman
Appendix: Resources, Stacey K. Rich and Robert L. Trestman
Robert L. Trestman is a Professor of Medicine, Psychiatry and Nursing at UCONN, and heads UConn Health Correctional Managed Health Care. He received his PhD in Psychology and MD from the University of Tennessee, and trained in psychiatry and neurobiology at the Mt. Sinai School of Medicine. Dr. Trestman has studied the neurobiology and treatment of people with severe mood and personality disorders, and conducts translational research on correctional health. Kenneth Appelbaum is a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry and Director of Correctional Mental Health Policy and Research in Commonwealth Medicine (CWM), the health care consulting division of the University of Massachusetts Medical School. From 1998 - 2007 he served as Director of Mental Health for the CWM correctional health program with responsibility for mental health services provided to all inmates in Massachusetts Department of Correction facilities, including Bridgewater State Hospital. He currently provides consultations on staffing, programming, policy, and safety for state and federal mental health and prison mental health systems. Jeffrey L. Metzner received his M.D. from the University of Maryland Medical School in 1975 and completed his psychiatric residency at the University of Colorado's Department of Psychiatry during 1979. He is a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Colorado School of Medicine in Denver, Colorado, where he is also Associate Director of the forensic fellowship program. Dr. Metzner has written extensively on the psychiatric care of prison populations. He has provided consultation to judges, special masters, monitors, state departments of corrections, city and county jails, U.S. Department of Justice, the National Prison Project, and others involved in the field of correctional psychiatry in over 36 states.
Winner of the the 2016 Manfred S. Guttmacher Award
"At last, a truly comprehensive textbook on correctional
psychiatry! Edited by well-known leaders in correctional
psychiatry, the Oxford Textbook of Correctional Psychiatry,
addresses all aspects of correctional psychiatry, including little
discussed, but critical and useful topics. Each chapter is concise,
cogent, clearly written, and therefore remarkably easy, pleasureful
to read. As a comprehensive text of the numerous mental health
challenges as well as the
structures, procedures, cultures and dynamics within correctional
systems, the Oxford Textbook belongs in the professional library of
every correctional clinician and administrator as well as every
mental health, correctional health and forensic reference library."
--Alan R. Felthous, Professor and Director of Forensic Psychiatry
at Saint Louis University School of Medicine
"In this multi-authored text, editors Trestman, Appelbaum, and
Metzner have put together an invaluable resource for all
psychiatrists interested in treating patients in correctional
psychiatry. I highly recommend this book for both novice and
experienced practitioners." -- Jeffrey S. Janofsky, M.D., Associate
Professor of Psychiatry and Behavior Sciences, Director, Psychiatry
and Law Program, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
"Edited by three renowned correctional psychiatrists, Oxford
Textbook of Correctional Psychiatry could not be timelier. This is
the first textbook devoted solely to correctional psychiatry, which
is now recognized as a critical component of community psychiatry.
It is a superb resource and will, no doubt, be the Henry C.
Weinstein, MD, Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, New York
University Medical Center
"The editors have used their encyclopedic vision of correctional
psychiatry along with a group of prominent contributors to create
an outstanding resource. The text provides theoretical and
practical insights into the clinical, legal and ethical issues that
are relevant to correctional psychiatry and easily earns its place
as a must read for forensic mental health professionals, educators,
and trainees. Attorneys, administrators of jails and prisons, and
policy
makers will also find this well written text a valuable resource."
-- J. Richard Ciccone, Professor of Psychiatry, University of
Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry
"This book can serve as a useful introduction for those unfamiliar
with mental health issues in these institutions, and the special
topics it addresses in the final section are enlightening." --
Steven T. Herron, Doody's
"With its wide coverage, excellent authors, and up-to-date
practical guidance, this text is a very valuable reference for
psychiatrists working in corrections and for those interested in
the ways in which correctional psychiatry differs from general
psychiatry." --American Journal of Psychiatry
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