Rearview
A Psychiatrist Reflects on Practice and Advocacy In a Time of Healthcare System Change
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
In Rearview: A Psychiatrist Reflects on Practice and Advocacy in a Time of Healthcare System Change Dr. Barry B. Perlman, a graduate of Yale Medical School, offers an overview of his career in medicine. From his first inklings of interest in mental health tied to his grandmother's bouts of severe depression and his mother's volunteer work with persons discharged from psychiatric hospitals, to his summer jobs in hospitals, through to closing his practice and retirement, Perlman recounts the entire arc of his psychiatric and medical career.
Through recalled anecdotes Perlman brings readers along by writing about experiences from medical school and his psychiatric residency. He describes his first professional experiences with dying, his cadaver, and clinical rotations such as neurosurgery and psychiatry. He experienced the English National Health Service when taking his OB/GYN clerkship in London. Readers will be introduced to several of his dedicated professors and their eccentricities.
Other chapters introduce topics central to the practice of psychiatry. They include consideration of suicide, violence, poverty, and electroconvulsive therapy. One chapter is revealingly illustrated with art done by patients and ponders the question of what makes art, art. Many of the chapters include interesting case presentations.
Dr. Perlman, an activist psychiatrist, served as president of the New York State Psychiatric Association. He was appointed by NYS Governor George Pataki as chair of the NYS Mental Health services Council and to the State Hospital Review and Planning Council. Based in participation, he describes the process and tensions involved in shaping public policy.
Readers of Rearview will be taken on a tour of the multidimensional life of an activist psychiatrist whose professional life encompassed provision of direct clinical care, running a psychiatric department under challenging circumstances, and trying to improve the lives of persons serious mental illness.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
What is a psychiatrist's work really like? Perlman, the former director of the department of psychiatry at Saint Joseph's Medical Center and president of the New York State Psychiatric Association, offers some nuanced answers in this artfully constructed debut memoir. Rather than give a straightforward chronological look at his career, Perlman frames his experiences through vignettes from his work life, which "share an experience and perspective on it and offer insight into the way we doctors understand our professional lives." The author covers a wide range of topics, including the impact of patient suicide on mental health professionals and the wrenching ethical conundrums presented by end of life decisions. The subject matter isn't all grim, as when an upset patient asks Perlman why he stuck his tongue out at her. The question initially baffles him, but he eventually places that action in context: he had asked her to do so as part of a neurological exam almost a year earlier. That encounter, he writes, taught him "to be as aware as possible of all aspects, verbal and non-verbal, of my interactions with patients." Readers intrigued by inside accounts of the medical profession by practitioners such as Oliver Sacks will find this a thought-provoking complement. (Self-published)