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166 PSYCHOSOMATICS MARCH-ApRIL
symptoms and syndromes, statistical approach topsychiatry, basic principles of psychiatric examination, extensive discussion of modern treatmentand a chapter on the legal aspects. There is avery detailed presentation of various etiologicalfactors covering four chapters, a solid chapteron preventive psychiatry and a very stimulatinganalysis of psychiatric research. The reader israther surprised to find a presentation of treatment placed not only ahead of a section describing special psychiatric conditions but also preceding presentation of the etiological factors.
Another feature of this book is the completeelimination of case histories. This is debatable,although it may fit a very concise, informative,and brief outline of psychiatry.
Considering this book to be of special assistance to general practitioners and non-psychiatricspecialists, more detailed treatment of psychiatriccomplications in various medical and surgicalconditions would probably be qUite welcome. Amuch more extensive discussion on psychodynamics of the doctor-patient relationship still waitsfor its proper place in the modern textbook.
A new text should introduce the reader to theup-tO-date approaches in the discussed field; references should be made primarily to the monographs or papers opening further vistas beforethe interested reader, e.g., in case of organicbrain disorders the excellent book of Dewan andSpaulding is appropriately quoted. On the otherhand, numerous general references to variouschapters of the established textbooks seem qUitesuperfluous. Still worse, a number of originalcontributions quoted in the text could not befound at all in the list of references, preventingthe interested reader from tracing the subjectfurther.
In reviewing separate chapters, the first onedevoted to introduction of the basic conceptsseems particularly appropriate in teaching medical students. We should certainly agree withthe author in his very sober discussion on changing concepts in psychiatric diagnosis and frequent disagreements among the diagnosticiansbelonging to di1ferent psychiatric orientations.This should not justify many vague and poorlysubstantiated diagnostic labels, distributed occasionally in psychiatric practice. The chapter onpsychiatric statistics is valuable and informative.Speaking of psychiatric evaluation the authorrightly remarks that "initial interviews have adual purpose of evaluation and establishing therelationship on which further therapeutic interaction will be based . . . the etIects of the interviewer's questions and behavior upon the patientand upon any subsequent treatment undertaken
should be constantly born in mind during theinitial process of evaluation."
The pleasant surprise of this book was the inclusion of the existential approach among psychotherapeutic techniques. As for other therapeutic methods, sociotherapy with juvenile delinquents and rehabilitation of psychiatric patientsin rural communities, by placement in farmingfoster homes, could be included. The chapterson preventive psychiatry and research shouldstimulate the interest of every medical practitioner. They conVincingly show considerable inadequacies in our mental health movement andbring out constructive suggestions.
In the discussion of sexual deviation andchronic alcoholism, a more detailed psychodynamic interpretation of such conditions wouldprobably be expected. The same applies to thediscussion of marital problems. Child Psychiatry has been rather neglected by the authorand this chapter provides limited factual material. From a psychodynamic point of view,truancy should be carefully distinguished fromschool phobia.
It may be said in general that Gregory's newtextbook of psychiatry prOVides interesting reading and should be welcomed into the psychiatricliterature.
Victor Szyrynski, M.D., Ph.D.
CLINICAL MEDICINE AND THE PSYCHOTICPATIENT. O. F. Ehrentheil, M.D., and W. E.Marchand, M.D. Chas. C. Thomas, Springfield,III. Pp. 383.
Case finding and diagnosis may be difficult inpsychotic patients due to lack of complaints. Inaddition, the difficulties in the management ofmedical illnesses in the psychotic warrant theauthors' etIorts in bringing together the information gathered through extensive experience.
The book includes considerations of the disorders that are peculiar to psychotics (e.g. exhaustion syndrome in catatonia, megacolon, irreversible insulin coma). It is noted that the mostfrequently overlooked disease in psychotics isacute myocardial infarction. Other chapters consider organic diseases of the central nervous system and the problems encountered in surgicalpractice. A most interesting chapter deals withthe low incidence of asthma, hay fever and rheumatoid arthritis in psychotics, in contrast to therelative frequency of duodenal ulcer.
Physicians interested in psychophysiologicalrelationships will find much of interest in this lucid presentation of a difficult area of medicalpractice.
W.D.