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Sometimes amazing things happen : heartbreak and hope on the Bellevue Hospital psychiatric prison ward
2017
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New York Times Review
Ford is a psychiatrist who cares for mentally ill prisoners. Her book testifies to the kind of love that physicians can offer: a dogged, practical devotion that leaves us missing birthdays, going sleepless and - in Ford's case - driving across a closed bridge toward Manhattan to secure safe care for prisoners who have been stranded by Hurricane Sandy. She coolly describes acts of care like walking into a room to comfort agitated, psychotic men twice her size. Happily, Ford is human here, and thus imperfect. She describes burning out, her failings as a parent and her inability to care for patients who have seriously harmed children after she herself becomes a mother. Motherhood also imbues her with a new authority in her care, and she discovers that the body of a pregnant physician incites moments of human connection with patients. Ford's bravery emerges not only in acts of clinical devotion but also in some light critique of the tense relationship between medicine and law enforcement. She describes how some correctional officers embedded in her psychiatric unit antagonize patients and occasionally thwart care. She also describes being devastated upon learning exactly how a patient was severely beaten during a "takedown" in the unit. This is not an exposé, however - and Ford is still an employee of Correctional Health Services - so she does not reveal whether the man was injured by a correctional officer or by psychiatric staff. The story is graphic and real but, as in most physician memoirs, details are withheld.
Library Journal Review
The focus of this book is mental health care in a correctional facilities setting, but it's also the very personal story of a dedicated psychiatrist who survived and thrived there. The work begins with Ford's (psychiatry, New York Univ. Sch. of Medicine; coeditor, Landmark Cases in Forensic Psychiatry) intern assignment at New York City's notorious Bellevue Hospital in 2000. She goes on to serve as the hospital's director of forensic psychiatry (she's currently chief of psychiatry for New York City's correctional health services) and becomes a wife and mother. Chapters describe patients and the challenges Ford faced in the prison ward environment with detainees mainly from Rikers Island. Clinical symptoms, treatment, and behaviors are discussed in layman's terms along with staff strengths and failings. Patient profiles tend to be sensitively drawn, though detail about patient backgrounds and outcomes would have enhanced the text. This compassionate portrayal contrasts markedly with the harsher perspective expressed in Stephen Seager's Behind the Gates of Gomorrah. VERDICT This illuminating and inspiring insider's view of jailhouse psychiatry should appeal to readers interested in criminal justice issues.-Antoinette Brinkman, formerly with Southwest Indiana Mental Health Ctr. Lib., Evansville © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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