Human Trafficking
- John H. Coverdale, M.D., Ed.D.,
- Mollie R. Gordon, M.D.,
- Phuong T. Nguyen, Ph.D.
Human Trafficking: A Treatment Guide for Mental Health Professionals is an educational and clinical resource for health care practitioners from any discipline who may encounter sex- or labor-trafficked persons. The book's editors direct the Baylor College of Medicine Anti-Human Trafficking Program in Houston, and in the last year, they have identified close to 100 trafficked persons in their hospital's small inpatient psychiatry unit—a rate that appears to be growing. Their extensive experience has made them uniquely qualified to pen this guide, which is singular in delivering the background knowledge and frontline clinical strategies providers need to identify, relate to, and treat these psychologically wounded, yet resilient patients. Each chapter begins with a compelling clinical case to bring the often-horrifying conditions these patients have endured into focus and to contextualize the pertinent research, assessment, and treatment information that follows. The chapters address epidemiology and screening, general and specific management principles in different settings, and specific topics such as managing concomitant substance use disorders, issues pertaining to children, advocacy, confidentiality and reporting requirements, psychotherapeutic principles, cultural issues, and trafficked persons' accounts of their own experiences with the health care system.
Designed to enlighten and instruct, Human Trafficking: A Treatment Guide for Mental Health Professionals is a wake-up call and a wise and worldly companion for clinicians serving this overlooked population.
John Coverdale, M.D., M.Ed., is professor of psychiatry and medical ethics at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas; serves as deputy editor of Academic Psychiatry and associate editor of Academic Medicine ; and co-directs the anti-human trafficking program at Baylor College of Medicine.
Mollie R. Gordon, M.D., is an associate professor in the Menninger Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas, where she is a co-director of the Anti-Human Trafficking Program. She is a co-chair of the American Medical Women's Association Physicians Against the Trafficking of Humans, is on the HEAL trafficking speakers bureau, and has opined for the Office of Trafficking in Persons.
Phuong T. Nguyen, Ph.D., is an associate professor in the Menninger Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Baylor College of Medicine. He is director of psychology services at Ben Taub Hospital and the program director of the BCM Anti-Human Trafficking Program. Additionally, he serves as the training director for the BCM Psychology Internship Program and the Ben Taub Hospital/BCM Psychology Postdoctoral Fellowship Program, which includes the country's first formal psychology postdoctoral fellowship track specializing in anti-human trafficking work.
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.books.9781615379439 |
Publisher: | American Psychiatric Publishing |
Copyright Year: | 2020 |
Print Date: | June 11, 2020 |
Online Date: | December 5, 2024 |