Somatic Therapies (Somatotherapies)

Author(s):  
Daniel P. Greenfield
Keyword(s):  
1992 ◽  
Vol 22 (1) ◽  
pp. 3-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A. Fishbain ◽  
Steve Barsky ◽  
Myron Goldberg

The authors describe a forty-one-year-old female with possible monosymptomatic hypochondriacal psychosis (MHP): a delusional belief that she had contracted rabies. This is the first report of this type of delusion in MHP. The patient failed to respond to multiple somatic therapies and finally made a serious suicide attempt. The authors discuss the reasons for the failed treatment and suggest a sequential protocol for treatment of MHP based on the current literature.


Author(s):  
Martin Summers

This chapter continues an examination of the superintendency of William Alanson White but offers a more granular discussion of how ideas about racial difference shaped the clinical encounter in the era of dynamic psychiatry. Specifically, it looks at how Saint Elizabeths’ staff applied particular somatic “therapies”—including seclusion, restraint, and hydrotherapy—to black female, white female, black male, and white male patients. It also argues that the clinical staff’s limited psychotherapeutic engagement with African American patients was further undermined by two things. One was the psychiatrists’ assumptions about the inaccessibility of the black psyche—either because of the absolute cultural foreignness or natural duplicity of African Americans. The other was their tendency to prioritize black patients’ rehabilitation as laborers. Finally, the chapter looks at the quotidian ways that patients exerted their agency in the clinical encounter by resisting medical surveillance and institutional management.


2017 ◽  
pp. 135-156
Author(s):  
Carole Lazaro ◽  
Lisa A. McMurray ◽  
Milena Rogan Ducic ◽  
Timothy E. Lau

Author(s):  
Justin C. Ellison ◽  
Jason B. Rosenstock ◽  
Michael J. Marcsisin

A variety of somatic therapies can be used to treat individuals suffering from psychosis. Most commonly, providers will prescribe antipsychotics, which generally block dopamine receptors and are particularly useful at reducing positive symptoms. Second-generation antipsychotics have fewer movement side effects than older agents do, but they are more expensive and have more metabolic side effects. Long-acting injectable (LAI) antipsychotics can be useful for improving outcomes, especially in non-adherent patients, and clozapine is the gold standard for treatment-refractory psychosis. Other agents may be useful for adjunct therapy, or in early psychosis, such as antidepressants, mood stabilizers, and benzodiazepines. In this chapter, we will also review other somatic therapies such as electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) and other neuromodulation approaches.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (11) ◽  
pp. 5573-5573
Author(s):  
Douglas S. Faust ◽  
Renee Gardner ◽  
Christopher Rayford

Abstract There is a substantive body of literature on the use of Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) therapies among adult populations generally, and chronically ill populations specifically, however less is known about its utilization with sick children. The use of CAM approaches to the treatment of sickle cell (SC)disease and the associated pain crises has focused largely on the use of hypnosis, musculoskeletal manipulations, or relaxation techniques for acute pain relief. The more general use of CAM therapies in the treatment of sickle disease by families is less well surveyed. Numerous studies have found utilization of CAM therapies in up to 70% in both general and sick adult populations, with somewhat lower incidence in pediatric populations. Adults attending sickle cell clinics with their children were asked to participate in structured interviews detailing the use of vitamins and supplements, physical and somatic therapies, and spiritual/holistic therapies, working from a standard list of interventions used in other studies. 47% of the sample regard treatment with CAM therapies as harmless, however the majority of respondents indicated they were aware of the potential for a potential interaction between prescriptive medication and CAM practices. Most believed that CAM therapies were widely used by adults, and both healthy and physically ill children. In this sample, 80% of those sampled reported the use of CAM therapies in the home, but only 53% reported using CAM therapies with the chronically ill child. The most frequently endorsed CAM approaches included prayer (70%), relaxation (55%) and general vitamins (45). Removing prayer as an alternative failed to significantly reduce the incidence of CAM usage with either the family or the physically ill child. Of the various supplements considered in the treatment of SC disease and discussed in the literature, none of the families reported use of Niprisan, one family reported use of aged garlic, two families reported use of Noni Juice, and 17% of the families reported the use of iron supplements for their child with SC. Further research with other chronically ill pediatric populations is underway, with additional data to be gathered on the use of cultural or regional folk remedies, typically not sampled in other CAM surveys.


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