The New England Journal of Medicine
e-mail icon  FREE NEJM E-TOC    HOME   |   SUBSCRIBE   |   CURRENT ISSUE   |   PAST ISSUES   |   COLLECTIONS   |    Advanced Search
Sign in | Get NEJM's E-Mail Table of Contents — Free | Subscribe
 
Book Review
PreviousPrevious
Volume 358:435 January 24, 2008 Number 4
NextNext

Psychotic Depression

Since this article has no abstract, we have provided an extract of the first 100 words of the full text and any section headings.

 Sign up for free e-toc
 

This Article
-Full Text
- PDF
-PDA Full Text
-Purchase this article

Tools and Services
-Add to Personal Archive
-Add to Citation Manager
-Notify a Friend
-E-mail When Cited
-E-mail When Letters Appear

More Information
By Conrad M. Swartz and Edward Shorter. 327 pp. New York, Cambridge University Press, 2007. $85. ISBN 978-0-521-87822-7.

Psychotic Depression is not quite a textbook, not quite a monograph on a specific illness, not quite a collection of psychiatric case histories, and not quite a scholarly history — although one of its authors is an accomplished historian of psychopharmacology and the other is a clinical expert on psychotic depression. The book is a mixture of these genres.

The understanding of depression is central to clinical psychiatry, and the interaction of genetic, biochemical, psychosocial, and neurodegenerative causes is still unresolved. The 1970s saw the ascent of "lumpers," who put all types of depression into the category of major depressive . . . [Full Text of this Article]




HOME  |  SUBSCRIBE  |  SEARCH  |  CURRENT ISSUE  |  PAST ISSUES  |  COLLECTIONS  |  PRIVACY  |  TERMS OF USE  |  HELP  |  beta.nejm.org

Comments and questions? Please contact us.

The New England Journal of Medicine is owned, published, and copyrighted © 2010 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved.