ABSTRACT

Good clinical practice is impossible without an understanding of the ways in which patients present their complaints. Patients have their own styles of coping and of expressing their concerns, and without a clear understanding of these the clinician may find successful and swift diagnosis and treatment much harder to achieve. Coping and Complaining provides essential guidance for clinicians on how to identify various coping styles, and how to improve the quality of discourse with people of different backgrounds and ages.
Drawing on a diverse range of evidence from such areas as developmental psychology, and theories on learning and memory, Coping and Complaining provides essential information on identification of patients' coping styles, focusing on such areas as:
· The latest developments in attachment theory
· The neurobiology of emotional development, and the biology of language development
· Primary processes in early development
· Communication, role play, the moral order of the consultation, and emotional first aid
· Consequences for preventive medicine
Coping and Complaining presents stimulating new approaches to consultations with patients and creative new ways of looking at health promotion.

chapter 1|20 pages

’I’m ill; you’re sick’

chapter 2|33 pages

Genes, brain and the internal milieu

chapter 3|39 pages

Learning and memory

chapter 4|31 pages

The ideal patient

chapter 5|49 pages

‘I’m OK; don’t worry about me’

chapter 8|42 pages

Goal-corrected partnerships for health