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Home >> Books >> Self-Help/Health >> Authoritative Guide to Self-Help Resources in Mental Health
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Authoritative Guide to Self-Help Resources in Mental Health
 
Keeping pace with the ever-changing world of self-help, the revised and expanded edition of this indispensable reference helps consumers and professionals distinguish high-quality self-help resources from those that are misleading, inaccurate, or even harmful. The number of resources reviewed has increased by more than 60%, to over 1,000 self-help books, autobiographies, and popular films. Ratings now embody the collective wisdom of more than 3,000 mental health professionals. Supplementing their eight national studies, the authors also describe and evaluate hundreds of Internet sites and provide valuable listings of self-help and support groups. The volume is organized around 36 frequently encountered clinical problems and life challenges, with entirely new chapters covering posttraumatic stress disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, youth violence, borderline personality disorder, bipolar disorder, and suicide. The concluding chapter delineates 11 key strategies for selecting an effective self-help resource.

 
 
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Chapter One

Depression

Depression is a frequently used and abused term. When someone asks you what is wrong as they look at your gloomy face, you might respond, "I feel depressed about myself, about my life." Everyone is down in the dumps some of the time, but most people, after a few hours, days, or weeks, snap out of their despondent moods.

However, some people are not as fortunate. They suffer from major depression, a mood disorder that involves feeling deeply unhappy, demoralized, self-derogatory, and apathetic. A person who has major depression often does not feel physically well, loses stamina, has a poor appetite, is listless, and experiences a sleep disorder. Major depression is so common in the United States that it has been called the flu of mental disorders. (The extreme mood swings of bipolar disorder, or manic-depression, are covered in Chapter 10).

Just as with anxiety, there is a

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