1st Edition

Psychosocial Impact of Lupus Social Work's Role and Function

Edited By N. Beckerman, Charles Auerbach Copyright 2013

    With Lupus affecting more than 1.5 million Americans, predominantly women of childbearing age, there are many complex psychosocial challenges for the health care provider, the patient and the family. This book provides a comprehensive overview of the psychosocial impact of Lupus as a range of health care providers in the field explain the medical, sociocultural and psychological frameworks particularly critical for a better understanding of this perplexing autoimmune disease.

    With original qualitative and quantitative research and rich case studies and examples from both care providers and patients, this book provides essential information about diagnosis, treatment, mental health issues, and cultural competency issues relevant to all that live with Lupus or provide care to those living with it.

    This book was originally published as a special issue of Social Work in Health Care.

    Preface: Psychosocial Impact of Lupus: Social Work’s Role and Function N. L. Beckerman and Charles Auerbach

    1. Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: An Overview Anca Askanase, Katrina Shum, and Hal Mitnick

    2. SLE: Serving the Underserved in an Academic Medical Center Irene Blanco

    3. Lupus: An Integrative Medicine Approach to Assessment and Treatment of an Autoimmune Disorder Rosemarie Cartagine

    4. Listening to Lupus Patients and Families: Fine Tuning the Assessment N. L. Beckerman and Michele Sarracco

    5. Locus of Control and Lupus: Patients’ Beliefs, Perspectives, and Disease Activity Charles Auerbach and N. L. Beckerman

    6. Lupus and Community-Based Social Work Wendy Schudrich, Diane Gross, and Jessica Rowshandel

    7. Patients With Lupus: An Overview of Culturally Competent Practice Carmen Ortiz Hendricks

    8. Research Studies and Their Implications for Social Work Practice in a Multidisciplinary Center for Lupus Care Su Jin Kim, Pretima Persad, Doruk Erkan, Kyriakos Kirou, Roberta Horton, and Jane E. Salmon

    Biography

    N. L. Beckerman, LCSW, DSW is a Professor at the Wurzweiler School of Social Work, Yeshiva University in New York, USA. She has published widely in the areas of HIV/AIDS, psychosocial impact of illness in health care, diagnosis and treatment of PTSD, and family and couple therapy. She is the author of Couples of Mixed HIV Status: Clinical issues and interventions (2005).

    Charles Auerbach, MSW, PhD is a Professor at the Wurzweiler School of Social Work, Yeshiva University in New York, USA, and Visiting Professor at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, USA. He has published widely in the areas of child welfare and social work in health care.