LEADER 00000nam 22005171 4500
003 DcWaAPA
005 20101209093005.0
006 m d
007 cr
008 101209s2011 dcu sb 001 0 eng d
020 9781433809002 (hardcover : print ed.)
020 1433809001 (hardcover : print ed.)
020 9781433809019 (electronic bk.)
020 143380901X (electronic bk.)
040 DcWaAPA
092 618.76
100 1 Wenzel, Amy.
245 10 Anxiety in childbearing women|h[electronic resource] :
|bdiagnosis and treatment /|cAmy Wenzel.
250 1st ed.
260 Washington, D.C. :|bAmerican Psychological Association,
|cc2011.
300 viii, 275 p. ;|ccm.
500 APA ebook
500 IT Carlow ebook
504 Includes bibliographical references and index.
505 0 Anxiety symptoms during pregnancy and the postpartum
period -- Worry and generalized anxiety -- Obsessions and
compulsions -- Panic attacks -- Social anxiety --
Childbirth-related fear and trauma -- A biopsychosocial
model of perinatal anxiety -- Assessment of perinatal
anxiety -- Pharmacotherapy for perinatal anxiety --
Psychotherapy for perinatal anxiety -- Self-help resources
for perinatal anxiety.
520 "Researchers have made tremendous progress in identifying
and describing the nature and phenomenology of perinatal
anxiety. Symptoms of anxiety have been studied in relation
to birth outcomes for more than 30 years, and diagnoses of
perinatal anxiety disorders have been the subject of much
empirical research particularly over the past decade.
Various manifestations of perinatal anxiety are being
linked with increasing frequency to the biological and
psychological changes that accompany pregnancy and the
postpartum period. Moreover, there is an increasingly
large body of literature that identifies factors that have
the potential to make women vulnerable to developing
perinatal anxiety. Research pertaining to these and other
related issues is brought together here in one volume for
the first time. Whereas perinatal depression is a
relatively straightforward condition to identify and
define, perinatal anxiety is observed in many forms. Part
I of this volume is geared toward the description of
various manifestations of perinatal anxiety disorders and
an evaluation of empirical research conducted to date.
Part II of this volume focuses on the clinical
implications of the many types of perinatal anxiety
symptoms and disorders described in Part I. The Conclusion
to the volume highlights important themes that emerge
across chapters and proposes an agenda for future
research"--Introduction. (PsycINFO Database Record (c)
2010 APA, all rights reserved).
530 Also issued in print.
533 Electronic reproduction.|bWashington, D.C. :|cAmerican
Psychological Association,|d2010.|nAvailable via World
Wide Web.|nAccess limited by licensing agreement.|7s2010
dcunns
650 0 Anxiety in women.
650 0 Mental illness in pregnancy.
650 0 Postpartum psychiatric disorders.
650 0 Pregnant women|xMental health.
650 0 Childbirth|xPsychological aspects.
710 2 American Psychological Association.
776 0 Original|w(DLC) 2010019775
856 40 |zRead this electronic book via the web|uhttp://0-
content.apa.org.www.library.itcarlow.ie/books/2010-13286-
000
856 41 |zSend a message to library staff if access to this online
resource is unavailable|uhttp://www.library.itcarlow.ie