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Epidemiological medicine's best-kept secret?

Invited commentary on… Working with patients with religious beliefs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

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Even to have a paper on working with patients with religious beliefs in a psychiatric journal is a liberating experience, and Dr Dein (2004, this issue) has dealt with his subject with thoroughness and fair-mindedness. We have come a long way since the standard British textbook of psychiatry in the 1960s (Mayer-Gross et al, 1960) could state that religion is for ‘the hesitant, the guilt-ridden, the excessively timid, those lacking clear convictions with which to face life’. At that time religious belief in patients was equated with neurosis, and in trainees in psychiatry it was regarded as being seriously unscientific and was strongly discouraged.

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Research Article
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Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2003 
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