Oxford Handbook Of Psychiatry -

Driven by this gap, the group decided to write the book they wished they’d had. Their goal was to create a portable, "pocket-sized" reassurance that could:

: Integrate clinical observations with an emphasis on values-based practice, respecting patient perspectives and families as partners.

: While users initially criticized its growing "bulkiness" for a pocket book, it successfully transitioned to digital formats for smartphones and tablets to remain accessible on the ward. Oxford Handbook of Psychiatry

: Provide rapid guidance for acute presentations and emergency situations. Evolution and Legacy

: It quickly became ubiquitous in the bags and pockets of medical students and trainees across the UK and beyond. Driven by this gap, the group decided to

: Now in its 4th edition (released in 2019), it has expanded to 1,200 pages, covering the latest legislature, ICD-11 coding, and new chapters like Neuropsychiatry.

: Move beyond dense textbooks to offer a concise guide for the first months of psychiatric practice. : Provide rapid guidance for acute presentations and

In the early 2000s, David Semple, Roger Smyth, and their colleagues were junior doctors in Scotland. While their peers in general medicine relied on the iconic cheese-colored Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine to guide them through patient assessments, the young psychiatrists found no equivalent for their specialty. They were often baffled by the "strange" symptoms of their patients and felt a sense of relief only when a purely medical problem arose—something they finally understood. The Vision