dc.relation | 1. World Health Organization. Mental Health Action Plan 2013 – 2020. Geneva: WHO. 2013.
2. Kohn R, Saxena S,Levav I, Saraceno B. The treatment gap in mental health care.Bulletin of the World Health Organization. 2004; 82:858-66.
3. Lancet Global Mental Health Group, Chisholm D, Flisher AJ, Lund C, Patel V, Saxena S, Thornicroft G, Tomlinson M. Scale up services for mental disorders: a call for action. Lancet. 2007; 370(9594):1241-52.
4. Pan American Health Organization. Mental Health in the Americas: New Challenges in a new millennium. Washington DC: PAHO/WHO. 2001.
5. World Health Organization. Mental health atlas 2014. Geneva: WHO. 2015.
6. Eaton J, Kakuma R, Wright A, Minas H. A position statement on mental health in the post-2015 development agenda. International Journal of Mental Health Systems .2014; 8:28.
7. Farooq K, Lydall GJ, Malik A, Ndetei DM, ISOSCCIP Group, Bhugra D. Why medical students choose psychiatry - a 20 country cross-sectional survey. BMC Medical Education. 2014; 14:12.
8. Farooq K, Lydall GJ, Bhugra D. What attracts medical students towards psychiatry? A review of factors before and during medical school. Int Rev Psychiatry. 2013; 25(4): 371–7.
9. Lampe L, Coulston C, Walter G, Malhi G. Familiarity breeds respect: attitudes of medical students towards psychiatry following a clinical attachment. Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2010; 18(4): 348 – 53.
10. Gowans MC, Clin EGD, Wright BJ, Brenneis FR, Scott IM. Which Students Will Choose a Career in Psychiatry?Can J Psychiatry. 2011; 56 (10): 605-13.
11. Amini H, Nejatisafa A, Shoar S, Kaviani H, Samimi-Ardestani M, Shabani A, et al. Iranian Medical Students’ Perception of Psychiatry: Before and After Psychiatry Clerkship. Iran J Psychiatry. 2013; 8(1): 37-43.
12. Malhi GS, Coulston CM, Parker GB, Cashman E, Walter G, Lampe LA, et al. Who picks psychiatry? Perceptions, preferences and personality of medical students. Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2011; 45(10): 861-70.
13. Cook CCH. The Faith of the Psychiatrist. Mental Health, Religion & Culture 2011; 14: 9 -17.
14. Ventress W, Dharamsi S. Beyond Religion and Spirituality: Faith in the Study and Practice of Medicine. Perspectives in Biology and Medicine. 2013; 56(3): 352-61.
15. Baetz, M., Griffin, R., Bowen, R., & Marcoux, G. Spirituality and psychiatry in Canada: Psychiatric practice compared with patient expectations. Can J Psychiatry.2004; 49(4):265–71.
16. Curlin, FA, Odell SV, Lawrence RE, Chin MH, Lantos JD, Meador KG, et al. The relationship between psychiatry and religion among US physicians. Psychiatric Services. 2007; 58(9): 1193–8.
17. Butcher W. Spirituality, Religion and Psychiatric Practice in New Zealand. Christchurch: University of Otago. 2013.
18. Durà-Vilà G, Hagger M, Dein S, Leavey G. Ethnicity, religion and clinical practice: a qualitative study of belief and attitudes of psychiatrists in the United Kingdom. Mental Health, Religion & Culture. 2011; 14(1): 53-64.
19. Moreira-Almeida A, Koenig HG, Lucchetti G. Clinical implications of spirituality to mental health: review of evidence and practical guidelines. Rev Bras Psiquiatr. 2014; 36(2):176–82.
20. Mayta-Tristán P, Pereyra-Elías R, Montenegro-Idrogo JJ, Mejia CR, Inga-Berrospi F, Mezones-Holguin E, et al. Profile and professional expectations of medical students from 11 Latin American countries: Red LIRHUS Project. BMC Res Notes [in review]
21. Alarcón RD. Mental Health and Mental Health care in Latin America. World Psychiatry 2003: 2 (1): 54-6.
22. Talbott JA. The Fate of the Public Psychiatric System. Psychiatric Services 2004: 55 (10): 1136-40.
23. Janse Van Rensburg AB, Myburgh CP, Szabo CP, Poggenpoel M. The role of spirituality in specialist psychiatry: a review of the medical literature. Afr J Psychiatry (Johannesbg).2013: 16(4):247-255.
24. Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life. The Global Religious Landscape: A report on the Size and Distribution of the World’s Major Religious Groups as of 2010. Washington DC: Pew Research Center. 2012.
25. Bell J, Sahgal N, Cooperman A, Schwarzer S, Connor P, Funk C, et al. Religion in Latin America: Widespread Change in a Historically Catholic Religion. Pew Research Center. 2014; 13: 01 – 130.
26. Shiah YJ, Chang F, Chiang SK, Lin IM, Tam WC. Religion and Health: Anxiety, Religiosity, Meaning of Life and Mental Health. J Relig Health. 2015; 54(1): 35-45.
27. Tajima-Pozo K, Zambrano-Enriquez D, De Anta L, Moron MD, Carrasco JL, Diaz-Marsá M. Practicing exorcism in schizophrenia. BMJ Case Reports. 2011; doi:10.1136
28. Harris JC. Exorcism: The Miracles of St Ignatius of Loyola. JAMA Psychiatry.2014; 71(8): 866 – 867.
29. Koenig HG. Religion, spirituality, and health: The Research and Clinical Implications. ISRN Psychiatry. 2012; doi:10.5402/2012/278730
30. Cotti P. 'I am reading the history of religion': a contribution to the knowledge of Freud's building of a theory. Hist of Psychiatry. 2014; 25(2): 187-202.
31. Curlin FA, Lawrence RE, Odell S, Chin MH, Lantos JD, Koenig HG, et al. Religion, Spirituality, and Medicine: Psychiatrists’ and Other Physicians’ Differing Observations, Interpretations, and Clinical Approaches. Am J Psychiatry. 2007; 164(12): 1825-31.
32. Pargament KI, Lomax JW. Understanding and addressing religion among people with mental illness. World Psychiatry. 2013; 12(1):26–32.
33. Harding C. Japanese psychoanalysis and Buddhism: the making of a relationship. Hist of Psychiatry. 2014; 25(2) 154-70.
34. Bowen R, Baetz M, D’Arcy C. Self-rated importance of religion predicts one-year outcome of patients with panic disorder. Depress Anxiety. 2006; 23(5): 266 – 73.
35. Chida Y, Steptoe A, Powell LH. Religiosity/Spirituality and Mortality. Psychother Psychosom. 2009; 78(2):81–90.
36. Cook CCH. Religious Psychopathology: The prevalence of religious content of delusions and hallucinations in mental disorder. International Journal of Social Psychiatry 2015: 61(4) 404-25. | |