Congress of psychiatry
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SPECIAL SESSIONS 43 Jean Delay Prize Jules Angst is awarded the WPA Jean Delay Prize 2017. The Jean Delay Prize is the most prestigious award that WPA gives triennially. It is awarded to an individual who has made a major contribution in the biological, psychological or social aspects of psychiatry or has built useful bridges between them. Jules Angst, Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, University of Zurich, Switzerland is awarded the WPA Jean Delay Prize 2017. At its meeting, the International Jury unanimously decided to award the Prize to him. This consists of a certificate and a cheque for EUR 40,000 paid for by SERVIER. The Prize will be presented by WPA President Dinesh Bhugra at the open- ing ceremony of the World Congress of Psychiatry, Ber- lin on Oct 8, 2017. Hearty congratulations to Jules Angst on this achievement. Bio sketch Jules Angst, MD, is Emeritus Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Zurich, Switzer- land and Honorary Doctor of the Universities of Heidelberg, Germany, and Craiova, Romania. In his early twenties Jules Angst qualified as a Jungian analyst. He trained in psychiatry under Manfred Bleuler at the Zurich University Psychiatric Hospital (the Burghölzli), where he went on to head the Research Department from 1969 until his retirement in 1994. His publica- tions span the past 60 years of clinical psychiatry. He remains active in epidemiological and clinical research. Jules Angst's monograph (1966) established and validat- ed the distinction between bipolar disorder, depression, and schizoaffective disorders on the basis of genetics, course, and personality. Later patient studies led to the development of a new mood spectrum concept of three dimensions: syndrome (mania to depression), severity (normal to psychotic) and temperament. He proposed improved diagnostic concepts of bipolar-I and bipolar-II disorders. His early work in clinical psychopharmacolo- gy established the efficacy of and the familial response to imipramine (1964). On the basis of multicentre stud- ies he provided statistical evidence for the long-term ef- ficacy of lithium (1970). His more recent work focused on the long-term prophylactic role of antidepressants and atypical neuroleptics in suicide prevention, the early onset of action of antidepressants, "drug-induced” hy- pomania, and the effect of lithium against dementia in patients with mood disorders. Award Ceremony: 8 Oct 2017 17:30 – 19:15 | Hall B Laudation: Dinesh Bhugra, United Kingdom Session: Opening Ceremony Prize money: EUR 40,000 › supported by SERVIER SPECIAL SESSIONS 44 Awards Recognition of excellent achievements DGPPN Awards 2017: Professional association acknowledges outstanding achievements The DGPPN acknowledges outstanding work and projects in the field of psychiatry and psychotherapy with a num- ber of prestigious awards. In addition to science, research and care, social issues are also one of the main focuses. The awards carry a total prize money of EUR 96,500. I. Science and Research DGPPN Research Award for Predictive, Preventive and Personalised Medicine in Psychiatry and Neurology Award Ceremony: 10 Oct 2017 17:00 – 18:00 | Hall A6 / 7 Laudation: Andreas Meyer-Lindenberg, Germany Keynote Lecture: Schizophrenie: von der Pathophysiolo- gie zur Therapie – ein Mythos? Peter Falkai, Germany Prize money: EUR 10,000 DGPPN Doctoral Thesis Award – Hans-Heimann Award Award Ceremony: 10 Oct 2017 15:15 – 16:15 | Hall B Laudation: Arno Deister, Germany Keynote Lecture: Irrbilder und Vorbilder – wie gelingt die mediale Darstellung von seelischer Gesundheit und Psychiatrie Eckart von Hirschhausen, Germany Prize money: 3 x EUR 6,000 DGPPN Award for Research on Mental Disorders Award Ceremony: 11 Oct 2017 11:45 – 12:45 | Hall A8 Laudation: Sabine C. Herpertz, Germany Keynote Lecture: Frühintervention bei Essstörungen Ulrike Schmidt, United Kingdom Prize money: EUR 15,000 DGPPN Poster Awards Award Ceremony: 12 Oct 2017 11:45 – 13:15 | Hall A6 / 7 Laudation: Andreas Küthmann, Germany Keynote Lecture: Irre – wir behandeln die Falschen: Unser Problem sind die Normalen Manfred Lütz, Germany Prize money: 10 x EUR 500 II. Health Care Research DGPPN Award for Health Care Research in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy Award Ceremony: 9 Oct 2017 10:00 – 11:00 | Hall A8 Laudation: Iris Hauth, Germany Keynote Lecture: Zukunft der psychiatrischen Versorgung Arno Deister, Germany Prize money: EUR 10,000 DGPPN Award for Nursing and Health Professions in Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics Award Ceremony: 10 Oct 2017 11:45 – 13:00 | Hall A3 Laudation: Arno Deister, Germany Keynote Lecture: Future of nursing: an underutilized global force to address and promote mental health Edilma L. Yearwood and Vicki Hines-Martin, USA Prize money: EUR 5,000 SPECIAL SESSIONS 45 III. Psychiatry in the Social Context DGPPN Antistigma Award – Advancement Award for the De-stigmatisation of Mental Illness Award Ceremony: 12 Oct 2017 10:00 – 11:00 | Hall A8 Laudation: Wolfgang Gaebel, Germany Keynote Lecture: Recovery: was wirkt. Michaela Amering, Austria Prize money: EUR 10,000 › in Kooperation mit dem Aktionsbündnis Seelische Gesundheit DGPPN Media Award for Scientific Journalism Award Ceremony: 11 Oct 2017 17:00 – 18:00 | Hall B Laudation: Iris Hauth, Germany Keynote Lecture: Forensische Psychiatrie: Schlusslicht oder Schaufenster der Psychiatrie? Norbert Nedopil, Germany Prize money: EUR 15,000 DGPPN Award for Philosophy and Ethics in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy Award Ceremony: 11 Oct 2017 13:30 – 14:30 | Hall A8 Laudation: Martin Heinze, Germany Keynote Lecture: Autonomie und psychische Störung – Überlegungen zu einer Kernaufgabe der Psychiatrie in Versorgung, Forschung und Lehre Paul Hoff, Switzerland Prize money: EUR 6,000 › supported by the Institute of Science and Ethics Bonn (IWE) DGPPN Best Paper Award For outstanding publications in Der Nervenarzt Award Ceremony: 10 Oct 2017 15:15 – 16:45 | Room M4 / M5 Laudation: Wolfgang Maier, Germany Symposium: Kann man durch Resilienztraining psy- chische Erkrankungen verhindern? Prize money: EUR 2,500 › supported by Springer Medizin Closing Ceremony Thu, 12 Oct 2017 | 12:00 – 13:00 | Hall A8 Welcome address WPA President Dinesh Bhugra, United Kingdom WPA Honorary Members and Fellows Announcement and Presidential Commendations Award Ceremony Geneva Prize for Human Rights in Psychiatry Laudation: François Ferrero, Switzerland & Dinesh Bhugra, United Kingdom Laureate: Jorge Alejandro Paiz Macz, Guatemala Closing statement WPA President Dinesh Bhugra, United Kingdom FOCUS ON MENTAL HEALTH The DGPPN is the largest scientifi c medical association focussing on mental health in Germany. It pools the competence of 9,000 doctors and scientists in the fi elds of psychiatry, psychotherapy and psychosomatics who work in university and non-university hospitals, in offi ce-based practices and in research. The association campaigns for the optimal care of patients with mental illnesses. It develops scientifi c guidelines, promotes training and further and continu- ing education and is involved in research into mental illnesses to advance diagnostics and treatment. The main focus is thereby on the holistic view of people and their individual mental, physical and social characteris- tics. The DGPPN actively advocates for the participation of people with mental illness in society and against their stigmatisation. © Holger Schwarz At your service and always on site! Visit the DGPPN booth at level 2 in the main foyer of the CityCube. On that occasion take a picture in our photo booth. Psychiatry and art BERLIN 48 PSY CHIA TR Y AND AR T Psychiatry in the time of National Socialism Exhibitions and sessions The period of National Socialism is the darkest chapter in the history of psychiatry in Germany and thus also in the history of the DGPPN predecessor organisations. People with physical and mental impairments were systematically persecuted and exter- minated – in the midst of German society – and psychiatrists were partly responsible. Registered, persecuted, annihilated: the Sick and the Disabled under National Socialism In 2009 the DGPPN acknowledged its special responsi- bility resulting from the involvement of its predecessor organisations in the crimes of National Socialism, the killing of huge numbers of ill people and forced sterili- sations. It initiated a research project that culminated in 2014 in the German- and English-language travelling exhi- bition “registered, persecuted, annihilated”. Meanwhile, more than 300,000 visitors have seen the exhibition nationally and internationally. The exhibition will be on display during the World Congress 2017. The exhibition is specifically aimed at a wide audience. Using the question of the value of life as a guiding prin- ciple, it considers the intellectual and institutional pre- conditions of the killings, summarises the events from exclusion and forced sterilisations up to the Holocaust, presents examples of victims, perpetrators, accomplic- es and opponents and finally looks into how the events of that period have been dealt with from 1945 until the present day. Sunday to Thursday | Hall B As part of the Scientific Visits, you will have the oppor- tunity to visit sites in Berlin relevant for the history of psychiatry. Additional information can be found on page 340. Dorothea Buck – a special destiny Born in 1917, Dorothea Buck was overcome by a severe mental crisis at the age of nineteen. During the Third Reich, she was classified as a minor human being be- cause of her diagnosis of schizophrenia. In accordance with the Nazi race policies she was forcibly sterilised in 1936. A few years later she barely escaped “euthana- sia”. Contrary to all prognoses – related to her incurable mental illness – Dorothea Buck tried to understand what drove her into psychosis and developed her own theory of her illness. Through this process she found the key to her own sanity. This development is inseparably linked with her evolution to an expressive and highly distin- guished sculptress. Dorothea Buck's artistic work has gained particular sig- nificance. Her accentuated lines give rise to impressive sculptures that appear to evoke what she was denied in the so-called sanatoriums: human attention and warmth. The film “The sky and beyond” depicts the life and work of this extraordinary woman, who is now 100 years old. Exhibition: Dorothea Buck Sunday to Thursday | Hall B Documentary: The sky and beyond Mon, 9 Oct 2017 | 15:15 – 17:45 | Hall London 1 © from private ownership © Hans Starosta 49 PSY CHIA TR Y AND AR T Artists as victims and survivors of National Socialism The life and work of artists with mental illness represent a special challenge and opportunity in the discussion of the Nazi and post-war periods: through their art, we en- counter people with an evocative destiny. The pictures move us by creating a personal and active dialogue. The exhibition focusses on two artists, the architect and painter Paul Goesch, born in 1885, and the locksmith Julius Klingebiel (1904 – 1965). Their paintings stand for the numerous patients who became victims of Nazi psychiatry. Paul Goesch created important expressionist paintings while still in a mental asylum. He was killed in Brandenburg in 1940. Julius Klingebiel was forcibly sterilised, avoided the killing campaigns and survived the war. In the post-war period he created a solitary art environment (“Raumkunstwerk”) in his cell which will be shown at the congress. Exhibition: Artists as victims and survivors of NS psychiatry Sunday to Thursday | Hall B Accompanying symposium: Artists as victims and survivors of National Socialism – commemoration in Germany and the challenges today Tue, 10 Oct 2017 | 11:45 – 13:15 | Hall London 1 Documentary: Outbreak in the art – Julius Klingebiel's Cell Thu, 12 Oct 2017 | 11:45 – 13:15 | Hall London 1 Registered, persecuted, annihilated: guided exhibition tours German-language and English-language tours are offered on 9 October I 15:00 and 17:00 and on 11 October I 13:30. Please meet your guide 10 minutes earlier in Hall B where the exhibition is located. © Heinz Heiss 50 PSY CHIA TR Y AND AR T Exhibition: People in Chains In villages of the Ivory Coast and Benin, thousands of mentally ill people live as so- called “people in chains”. They are chained to trees or locked into dark crates. They are tethered up like animals, sometimes for weeks, sometimes for years. Some die in captivity. Society is afraid of them; the belief still prevails that mentally ill people are possessed by demons. Monday to Thursday | Hall 2.2 The local organisation St. Camille de Lellis has been working since 1991 to free these people from their chains and care for them appropriately in treatment centres. The non-profit organisation “Freundeskreis St. Camille“, based in Reutlingen, Germany, has been sup- porting these efforts for more than 20 years through per- sonal engagement, food and medicine. The aim is for the mentally ill people to return to their villages and receive long-term psychopharmaceutical treatment. The best way to enlighten people is to re-integrate the mentally ill into their communities and thus take away people's fear, particularly from the families. The exhibition “People in Chains: how mentally ill peo- ple are dealt with in West Africa” was designed by the museum MuSeele, a museum on the history of psychia- try located in the psychiatric hospital Christophsbad in Göppingen, Germany, in collaboration with the “Freun- deskreis St. Camille“. This travelling exhibition consists of large-format colour photographs by the photogra- phers Heinz Heiss and Uli Reinhardt together with short explanatory texts. An accompanying brochure provides additional background information. www.kettenmenschen.de www.museele.de 51 PSY CHIA TR Y AND AR T Exhibition: Being A Human “What interests me is – being a human” said Dr. Rieux in Camus' novel “The Plague”. “Being A Human” is a collection of photographs portraying people in Jimma, Ethiopia. These people face each other, share their day with happiness, anxiety, desperation and hope. Their feelings are depicted with peculiar ease. Sorrow and pessimism are seen in a playful and airy atmosphere. Monday to Thursday | Hall 2.2 Grace of human solidarity and joie de vivre is what we should not stop to learn from Camus. Jimma stands for everywhere! The story behind the pictures is: These individuals seek help for mental distress. They are patients at the Depart- ment of Psychiatry at Jimma University in Ethiopia. In 2010, Jimma University with Prof. Markos Tesfaye and the Center for International Health of Ludwig- Maximilians University Munich have launched a Masters programme for Mental Health in Jimma, a town in south- western Ethiopia. Up to now about 50 students finished the programme and work as Masters for Mental Health, caring for the well-being of people with mental distress all over Ethiopia. They provide a space for an integra- ted understanding of mental illness – building bridges between traditional beliefs and modern psychiatric and psychotherapeutic treatments. The Masters programme itself is meanwhile fully organised and staffed by previ- ous Masters. For the Center for International Health: Sandra Dehning, Andrea Jobst, Kristina Adorjan www.cih.lmu.de Photographs by Anselm Skogstad www.anselmskogstad.com © Anselm Skogstad is supported by with financial support from © Christoph Burger Touching photography – perhaps the only people who are still interested in the mental asylums of the past are the photographers of the urban exploration (“Urbex”) move- ment. Christoph Burger is one of them. Since 2013, he has made numerous trips to the Manicomi abbandonati of Italy. Monday to Thursday | Hall 2.2 The history of psychiatry in Italy is one of dramas and tragedies. Forgotten by society, legally incapacitated, mentally and often also physically tormented, patients were locked away in inhumane conditions, deprived of their dignity and marginalised until far into the 20th century. The darkest chapter in psychiatry was the rule of Benito Mussolini, which lasted from 1922 to 1943. In this peri- od of fascist terror thousands of political dissidents and people out of favour with the regime were declared to be mentally ill and deported to a “Manicomio” – with the aim of destroying them mentally or even physically. May 1978 marked a watershed in the history of psy- chiatry in Italy. Under the initiative of the psychiatrist and hospital director Franco Basaglia, the parliament in Rome passed the psychiatric reform. The declared aim was to introduce “humane psychiatry” by closing all Manicomi and creating sufficient places to provide out- patient care. Although most hospitals were closed and many patients were released, there were problems with creating the new points of care. The bold project faltered in its early stages; no one built the dense network of decentralised treatment centres that should have accompanied the gradual closing of the hospitals. Apart from thoroughly laudable private initiatives, every effective health service for the released patients was lacking. When Christoph Burger documents the decay in al- most inaccessible rooms, he does so without artifi- cial light and in keeping with the Urbex rule “Take nothing but pictures. Leave nothing but footprints.” Nothing is rearranged, everything is left as it is found. These trips have resulted in the series of im- ages “Manicomio”. Photographs by Christoph Burger www.christophburger.com 52 PSY CHIA TR Y AND AR T Exhibition: Manicomio Ihr Begleiter für Klinik und Praxis – für Psychiater, Psychotherapeuten und ihre Kollegen Direkt zum App Store Akute Angst- und Erregungszustände, Halluzinatio- nen, Depressionen oder Suchterkrankungen – im klinischen Alltag mit psychisch erkrankten Menschen kommt es immer wieder zu Situationen, die hohe Anforderungen an die Behandler stellen. Mit der neu- en DGPPN App können Sie schnell und unkompliziert auf praktisches Wissen und nützliche Informationen zugreifen. | Praxiswissen für Notfallsituationen – von Abhängigkeitssyndrom bis Zwangsstörung | Umfangreicher Wissensteil zu Diagnostik und Therapie psychischer Erkrankungen | Evidenzbasierte Leitlinienempfehlungen | Wissenstests zu häufi gen Krankheitsbildern | Praktische Extras wie BMI-Kalkulator oder Promillerechner | Teilhabekompass mit Übersicht über berufl iche Integrationsmaßnahmen | Aktuelle Informationen von der DGPPN Kostenloser Download Für alle mobilen Endgeräte Die DGPPN App 170831_WPC_2017_Anzeige_App.indd 1 31.08.17 08:29 © Richard Kogan 54 Music: Schumann performed by Richard Kogan PSY CHIA TR Y AND AR T Richard Kogan has led a distinguished career as both a professional pianist and as a physician. While studying medicine at Harvard, Dr. Kogan was encouraged to continue his music career along with his medical education. In later years, he began to merge these two fields and now explores the role of music in healing and discusses the impact of psychological and mental illnesses on the creative genius of well-known composers. Download 0.5 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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