Peter Handest, Denmark

Intitute of Mental Health Psychiatry
Peter Handest is Chief Psychiatric Consultant, PhD, at the Institute of Mental Health (Denmark). He is co-founder and chairman of The Danish Society for phenomenological psychopathology and his main research interests are prodromal states of schizophrenia, subjective experiences, self-disorders and classification. He is author of books and chapters on schizophrenia and schizotypal disorder, co-translator of the Danish version of the Bonn Scale for the Assessment of Basic Symptoms (BSABS, Huber et al 1987) and of Klaus Conrad´s monography on incipient psychosis. He is one of the key developers of the Examination of Anomalous Subjective Experiences (EASE), a clinical assessment tool for the exploration of subjective psychopathology in schizophrenia spectrum disorders.

Presenter of 1 Presentation

Educational 13:30 - 15:45

The ABCs of the Clinical-Diagnostic Interview

ALL SESSIONS
Educational

Moderator of 1 Session

Date
04.07.2020, Saturday
Room
Buenos Aires
Session Description
The diagnostic interview remains at the heart of clinical psychiatric practice. It consist of a dialogue between two subjects with the common goal of clarifying symptoms and diagnosis. It is precisely within such dialogic setting that the manifold diversity of psychopathological phenomena emerges, often beyond the descriptive boundaries of diagnostic glossaries. Indeed, the interview is a vital prerequisite to treatment and invariably sets the tone for the therapeutic alliance. The course, which capitalizes on the personal experience as a service user of one of the co-directors, is built upon a combination of live patient interview, discussions and short lectures. It will address foundational aspects of the psychiatric interview, focusing on strategic-technical aspects and relational-empathic skills; and also provide concrete advices, tips and tricks from experienced interviewers and patients. Key learning points will be: 1. how to establish an atmosphere of interpersonal trust and to initiate the diagnostic process, 2. how to ask “the best questions”, 3. how to explore the meaning behind common language phrases like “I feel depressed” or “I have had a nervous breakdown”, 4. how to discriminate between normal”, morbid and psychotic; and between subjective experience, notions and expressed behavior. 5. how to choose the best diagnostic tools and instruments.