The passage discusses three books related to mental health and rehabilitation:
1. **Guides to Psychiatric Rehabilitation: A Co-operative Programme with a State Mental Hospital** by B. J. Black, published by Altro Health and Rehabilitation Service Inc. (1963). This book details the work of Altro Health and Rehabilitation Services in providing rehabilitation services for mentally ill patients at Rockland State Hospital. It highlights the integration of nursing and occupational therapy staff and the provision of industrial assessment and sheltered work outside the hospital. The book also addresses general problems of mental hospital rehabilitation and emphasizes the principles of resettlement practice through case histories.
2. **Men Management and Mental Health** by Harry Levinson and others, published by Oxford University Press and Harvard University Press (1963). This book documents the research of the Menninger Foundation team on the relationship between health and human relations in an American utility company. It describes mental health characteristics such as treating others as individuals, flexibility under stress, and active productivity. The book explores how healthy individuals in industry can achieve interdependence and react to dependence, emphasizing the importance of aggression, affection, privacy, and reciprocity in group dynamics. It offers insights for managers on conflict resolution and the conditions necessary for progress.
3. **Memories, Dreams, Reflections** by C. G. Jung, recorded and edited by Aniela Joffe (Collins and Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1963). This book provides a personal account of Jung's life, revealing his deep humility and the journey of self-realization. It is a moving and insightful look into the mind of a psychiatrist and the founder of analytical psychology.
The passage also includes a brief section on the Indian Medical Gazette, discussing observations on the blood of patients with intermittent malaria, including the use of microscopic examination and the identification of specific conditions such as "echinosis" and "plasmodic" corpuscles.The passage discusses three books related to mental health and rehabilitation:
1. **Guides to Psychiatric Rehabilitation: A Co-operative Programme with a State Mental Hospital** by B. J. Black, published by Altro Health and Rehabilitation Service Inc. (1963). This book details the work of Altro Health and Rehabilitation Services in providing rehabilitation services for mentally ill patients at Rockland State Hospital. It highlights the integration of nursing and occupational therapy staff and the provision of industrial assessment and sheltered work outside the hospital. The book also addresses general problems of mental hospital rehabilitation and emphasizes the principles of resettlement practice through case histories.
2. **Men Management and Mental Health** by Harry Levinson and others, published by Oxford University Press and Harvard University Press (1963). This book documents the research of the Menninger Foundation team on the relationship between health and human relations in an American utility company. It describes mental health characteristics such as treating others as individuals, flexibility under stress, and active productivity. The book explores how healthy individuals in industry can achieve interdependence and react to dependence, emphasizing the importance of aggression, affection, privacy, and reciprocity in group dynamics. It offers insights for managers on conflict resolution and the conditions necessary for progress.
3. **Memories, Dreams, Reflections** by C. G. Jung, recorded and edited by Aniela Joffe (Collins and Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1963). This book provides a personal account of Jung's life, revealing his deep humility and the journey of self-realization. It is a moving and insightful look into the mind of a psychiatrist and the founder of analytical psychology.
The passage also includes a brief section on the Indian Medical Gazette, discussing observations on the blood of patients with intermittent malaria, including the use of microscopic examination and the identification of specific conditions such as "echinosis" and "plasmodic" corpuscles.