<p>Deaf adults and children like their hearing counterparts experience a full range of mental health problems. They develop psychoses sink into deep depressions abuse alcohol and drugs commit sexual offenses or simply have trouble adjusting to new life situations. But when a deaf client appears on the doorstep of an ordinary hospital residential facility clinic or office panic often ensues.</p><p><em>Mental Health Care of Deaf People: A Culturally Affirmative Approach</em> offers much-needed help to clinical and counseling psychologists psychiatrists social workers nurses and other mental health professionals--and to their program administrators. The editors a psychologist and a psychiatrist and the authors leading authorities with a variety of expertises systematically review the special needs of deaf patients particularly those who regard themselves as culturally Deaf and provide professionals with the tools they need to meet those needs.</p><p>Among these tools is an extensive library of pictorial questionnaires and information sheets developed by one of the very few psychiatric units in the country devoted to the deaf. These handouts greatly simplify the processes involved in the diagnosis and treatment of people who in many cases are not good readers--for example explaining medication and inquiring about side-effects. The handouts are reproduced on downloadable resources to enable purchasers to print out and use copies in their work.</p><p>This comprehensive clinical guide and its accompanying downloadable resources constitute vital resources for all those who seek to provide sensitive effective mental health care to deaf people.</p>
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