Showing posts with label psychology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label psychology. Show all posts

Assessing Adult Attachment: A Dynamic-Maturational Approach to Discourse Analysis (A Norton Professional Book) Review

Assessing Adult Attachment: A Dynamic-Maturational Approach to Discourse Analysis (A Norton Professional Book)
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After reading "Assessing Adult Attachment" I have come to the conclusion that if we had perfect parents the world would be a much more pleasant place to live. This book covers many topics including anxiety, fear, aggression, withdrawal, depressive disorders, bipolar disorder and criminal behavior.
Basically this book is an in depth look at a process called the Adult Attachment Interview. How individuals answer questions and interact is highly important.
In the first section of this book the theory and history of the Adult Attachment Interview is discussed. Then in the second part you get all the details of the classification. In the third part there is a discussion on ways to reduce psychological suffering.
This book is good if you want to classify your patients. Like someone might be C6 if bipolar or A6 if suicidal or C8 if overly fearful. A lot of dysfunctional behavior is also discussed. This is probably the most complex psychology book I've ever read. It is a book that is best studied and processed over time. Many facts will need to be memorized in order to analyze an Adult Attachment Interview.
I can recommend this to psychologists although this book does not really focus in on many treatment programs once you have the classification figured out. Perhaps that will be considered in future books.
~The Rebecca Review

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A method for identifying the psychological and interpersonal self-protective attachment strategies of adults.
This book focuses upon new methods of analysis for adult attachment texts. The authors' introduce a highly nuanced model-the Dynamic-Maturational Model (DMM)-providing clinicians with a finely-tuned tool for helping patients examine past relationships, in addition to gauging the potential effectiveness of various treatment options. The authors offer a fascinating explanation of the neurobiological underpinnings of DMM, grounded in findings from the cognitive neurosciences about information processing. In this volume, readers have an eminently practical, theoretically-grounded work that is sure to transform many types of therapy.

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Coming Home to Passion: Restoring Loving Sexuality in Couples with Histories of Childhood Trauma and Neglect (Sex, Love, and Psychology) Review

Coming Home to Passion: Restoring Loving Sexuality in Couples with Histories of Childhood Trauma and Neglect (Sex, Love, and Psychology)
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I highly recommend Ruth Cohn's Coming Home to Passion as an invaluable tool for couples searching for a roadmap out of the familiar but lonely lock-and-key patterns afflicting many pairings of adult children of trauma with adult children of neglect. Drawing on two decades of work as a psychotherapist in the field of trauma, the author stands out as a sharp and careful observer of the heartbreaking relationship patterns of such long-suffering couples. Ms. Cohn's confident humanity and clarity offer an unblinking beacon of hope. Writing in a style that is both sympathetic and playful, her insightful chronicle become a rollicking page turner. Couples will find a detailed guide to transforming their hard-won resilience from a self-protective armor, into a heroic willingness to risk, and to develop new, healthier, loving - and sexual - relationships.

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With the Phoenix Rising: Lessons from Ten Resilient Women Who Overcame the Trauma of Childhood Sexual Abuse (Jossey-Bass Psychology) Review

With the Phoenix Rising: Lessons from Ten Resilient Women Who Overcame the Trauma of Childhood Sexual Abuse (Jossey-Bass Psychology)
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My therapist gave me this book after I finished therapy and reading the book summed up my life as a resilient survivor. Until I read the book I really didn't realize just how resilient I was. I had always thought of myself as unsuccessful and not useful, but it is amazing to see in print just how successful my life is considering how traumatic and abusive the childhood-adolescent years of my life were. Working in therapy helped more than words can describe, and this book is the closure that I needed. It's nice to know there are so many women who are resilient after such oppressive childhoods. The title really does sum up resiliency in myself and hundreds of other women.

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The devastating effects of childhood sexual abuse have been widely chronicled, validating the difficulty with which many survivors struggle. Often overlooked are the millions of women who have overcome early trauma to lead successful, happy lives. Why do these women-whom we might otherwise have expected to fail-have such tremAndous strength and resilience? This question is at the heart of With the Phoenix Rising as it paints a moving and optimistic portrait of ten women who have overcome the trauma of childhood sexual abuse and shows how their resilient success can be encouraged in others who have suffered similar traumas.

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The Transforming Power Of Affect: A Model For Accelerated Change Review

The Transforming Power Of Affect: A Model For Accelerated Change
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In this most important work Dr Fosha describes in clear prose and with engaging case material an emerging trend in the practice of effective short term psychotherapy. Her understanding and honoring of the internal landscape of the patients subjective experience and affect regulation will be an inspiration to new clinicians and a source of wisdom to seasoned veterans. Theory is presented in a clear accessible manner free of fluff and is enhanced by her lyrical narrative style.
Peter A. Levine Ph.D. Author of "Waking the Tiger, Healing Trauma"

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The first model of accelerated psychodynamic therapy to make the theoretical why as important as the formula for how, Fosha's original technique for catalyzing change mandates explicit empathy and radical engagement by the therapist to elicit and harness the patient's own healing affects. Its wide-open window on contemporary relational and attachment theory ushers in a safe, emotionally intense, experience-based pathway for processing previously unbearable feelings. This is a rich fusion of intellectual rigor, clinical passion, and practical moment-by-moment interventions.

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Eye Movement Desensitization &Reprocessing , Basic Principles Protocols &Procedures - 2nd edition Review

Eye Movement Desensitization andReprocessing , Basic Principles Protocols andProcedures - 2nd edition
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This very readable book was written by EMDR originator Francine Shapiro to provide detailed directions for therapists using this approach. Beginning with descriptions of the historical development and theoretical model, the book provides a thorough overview of the treatment process. Several chapters describe each of the eight phases of treatment; information is also provided about working with special populations and with difficult treatment issues. EMDR was first developed as a treatment for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and the book summarizes the research investigating EMDR treatment of PTSD, most of which supports its effectiveness with this disorder. Research has shown preliminary support for EMDR's use with other disorders (e.g., phobias), and the treatment protocols for these approaches are described in detail. Recommendations are made for future research to further evaluate EMDR's effectiveness and to investigate what eye movements, and other treatment components, contribute to treatment effects. This book is an indispensable resource for the therapist who uses EMDR as part of an integrative treatment plan.

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Not Trauma Alone: Therapy for Child Abuse Survivors in Family and Social Context (Series in Trauma and Loss) Review

Not Trauma Alone: Therapy for Child Abuse Survivors in Family and Social Context (Series in Trauma and Loss)
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Excellent viewpoints from different angles. I read it from a 'victim in recovery' view. I identified with the entire book. It does not cover the more unusual aspect of the victim living in fear of losing his life at the hands of his mother as in my case; but does cover very fully the more usual traumas in the family context of PCB (Prolonged Child Abuse). I read it all through, then started all over again - slowly - with my yellow highlighter. It gave me confirmation and great respect of Steven Gold's immense research and practical experience in this area. One can see 'Dissociation' in action from the social family viewpoint. Definitely a good study/read for those dealing with trauma victims as survivors or those in recovery. This is reality. (We are not alone!)

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How is an individual to lead a comfortable, productive existence when he or she was never taught the skills necessary for effective living? Adult survivors of child abuse often face this dilemma. Instead of being nurtured as children and taught life-skills by their caregivers, child abuse survivors were subjected to a daily regimen of coercive control, contempt, rejection and emotional unresponsiveness. It is not surprising, therefore, that many survivors encounter difficulty adjusting from this type of damaging childhood atmosphere to one in which they have autonomy. This book addresses the particular problems associated with treating adult survivors of child abuse. Until now, psychotherapy for child abuse survivors often centered on the trauma of their abuse experiences. However, survivors frequently reveal a history suggesting it was not abuse trauma alone that created their difficulties, but growing up essentially alone - without the consistent emotional support and guidance needed for development of effective functioning.This book presents an alternative to trauma-focused treatment that, though effective for treatment of other forms of trauma, can induce deteriorated rather than improved functioning in survivors of prolonged childhood maltreatment. The contextual therapy presented in Not Trauma Alone delineates a psychotherapeutic approach that emphasizes helping survivors develop the capacities for effective functioning that were never transmitted to them during their formative years. Detailed descriptions of the methods and interventions comprising contextual therapy are included in this critical book for all mental health professionals, clinicians, academics, and students in the field.

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Psychotherapy without the Self: A Buddhist Perspective Review

Psychotherapy without the Self: A Buddhist Perspective
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I'd really hoped that Epstein's latest book would be similar to his other books, but unfortunately it isn't. It's a book written more for therapists than for people in general and features previously published academic articles. While the prose isn't too terribly hard to read or filled with academic jargon, it's clear that the intended audience probably has a deeper schooling in therapy than the average reader would.
It's an interesting perspective on Epstein's psychotherapeutic history and how his perspective has changed, but if you're looking for something, I'd recommend reading his earlier books instead.

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Immersed in Buddhist psychology prior to studying Western psychiatry, Dr. Mark Epstein first viewed Western therapeutic approaches through the lens of the East. This posed something of a challenge. Although both systems promise liberation through self-awareness, the central tenet of Buddha's wisdom is the notion of no-self, while the central focus of Western psychotherapy is the self. This book, which includes writings from the past twenty-five years, wrestles with the complex relationship between Buddhism and psychotherapy and offers nuanced reflections on therapy, meditation, and psychological and spiritual development.
A best-selling author and popular speaker, Epstein has long been at the forefront of the effort to introduce Buddhist psychology to the West. His unique background enables him to serve as a bridge between the two traditions, which he has found to be more compatible than at first thought. Engaging with the teachings of the Buddha as well as those of Freud and Winnicott, he offers a compelling look at desire, anger, and insight and helps reinterpret the Buddha's Four Noble Truths and central concepts such as egolessness and emptiness in the psychoanalytic language of our time.

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Handbook of Domestic Violence Intervention Strategies: Policies, Programs, and Legal Remedies Review

Handbook of Domestic Violence Intervention Strategies: Policies, Programs, and Legal Remedies
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The Handbook of Intervention Strategies with Domestic Violence Strategies covers public policy, the justice system, health care, crisis intervention, advocacy, and special at risk groups. This book provides a comprehensive overview of domestic violence using research, case studies, theory, and social data. I would recommend this book to social workers, lawyers, judges, counselors, and law enforcement personnel. The book is insightful and easy to read.

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Public awareness regarding the life-threatening nature and intense traumatic impactof domestic violence has substantially increased in the past decade. At the same time, dramatic changes have taken place regarding criminal justice and social work policies and practices applied to domestic violence intervention. And while the prevalence of domestic violence has declined slightly, national estimates still indicate that every year, approximately eight million women are abused, battered, stalked, or killed by their husbands, boyfriends, and other intimate partners. Featuring cutting-edge research and expert intervention strategies, theHandbook of Domestic Violence Intervention Strategies: Policies, Programs, and Legal Remediesis designed to prepare professionals to swiftly and compassionately meet the multiple needs of women and children who have suffered from domestic violence. This original and indispensable volume focuses on the numerous advances in legal remedies, program developments, treatment protocols, and multidisciplinary perspectives. It is a comprehensive guide to the latest research, public policies, and legal and criminal justice responses, covering federal and state legislation as well as trends in police and court responses to domestic violence. This is the first book to include court-based technology developments and new research related to the duration and intensity of woman battering. Highlighting actual cases and promising programs, the handbook also addresses important social work issues, including risk assessment protocols, a new five level continuum of woman battering, intervention methods, and treatment models. The book also examines the myriad legal issues and health problems facing the most neglected and vulnerable battered women. Written by expert practitioners and leading scholars in the field, the book's 23 chapters provide rich insights into the complexities and challenges of addressing domestic violence. This timely and definitive handbook is recommended for students, clinicians, policy makers, and researchers in the fields of social work, victim services, criminal justice, hospital administration, mental health counseling, public health, pastoral counseling, law enforcement. In fact, this volume is a critical resource for all helping professionals who are assisting abused women in escaping and remaining free from violent relationships.

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Professional Orientation to Counseling (Accelerated Development) Review

Professional Orientation to Counseling (Accelerated Development)
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My book arrived before the date due. I am currently using the book for my class, it is exaclty what I ordered and needed for my current course. Thank you for your prompted shipment and the excellent condition of the book. Also for helping me stay on track with school.

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The third edition of this text brings together developments in the evolving area of professional counselling. Presented in this edition are issues regarding ethics and legal issues, multicultural and diverse populations, individual and group counselling, assessment and appraisal, career development, counselling theory and practice, research, and an orientation to the profession of counselling. This book should be useful for students and professionals who are seeking an overview of the profession or an opportunity to review curricular content required for licensure, certification, or comprehensive examinations in counselling.

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Childhood Victimization: Violence, Crime, and Abuse in the Lives of Young People (Interpersonal Violence) Review

Childhood Victimization: Violence, Crime, and Abuse in the Lives of Young People (Interpersonal Violence)
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This is an important book whose goal is to conceptualize a new holistic scholarly enterprise which Finkelhor titles "developmental victimology", a field which encompasses (a) studies of conventional crimes in which children are victims (b) studies of child maltreatment including exploitation of child labor and (c) studies of "acts that would clearly be crimes if committed by adults against adults but which... are generally not of concern to the criminal justice system when they occur among or against children, such as sibling violence and assaults between pre-adolescent peers." Finkelhor has much that is new and interesting to say about sibling abuse and the frequency and severity of physical assault by other children and youth in adolescent and pre-adolescent populations; first and foremost, he argues that there are strong empirical grounds for describing physical altercations among children and youth as a form of victimization.
Finkelhor believes that the fragmentation of scholarship around victimization has led to an inadequate understanding of victimization as experiences which cut across specialized studies of child maltreatment, growing up with domestic violence, bullying, youth violence and other categories of youth victimization. An inadequate understanding of child and youth victimization leads, Finkelhor argues, to inadequate social responses and therapeutic interventions. The strongest feature of Finkelhor's book is his explanation of the "tremendous transitivity among victimization risks." Finkelhor asserts that "the risk for a new victimization is three to six times higher for a child who has been victimized previously. Moreover, it appears that any kind of victimization seems to apply, and no particular kind of victimization is far more predictive than others." Children physically assaulted by a caregiver are far more likely to be physically assaulted by a peer; children who are bullied at school are also more likely to be sexually assaulted, he maintains.
Finkelhor is particularly concerned about the developmental prospects of a group of children and youth whom he describes as "poly-victims", i.e., the subset of child victims who have experienced 4 or more separate victimizations in a year; approximately a third of victimized children, as Finkelhor defines the term, meet the criterion for poly-victim. These children and youth have usually had severe victimization experiences and they are by far the most troubled youth; for example, 86% of clinically depressed children and youth in Finkelhor's large Developmental Victimization Survey were poly-victims. According to Finkelhor, this group of children and youth "show signs that they are locked in a pattern or trapped in a downward spiral ... (of victimization and emotional distress)." For these children and youth, "victimization is more a condition than an event." Finkelhor believes that one of the most important diagnostic challenges facing helping professionals is to accurately identify these children, a task made more difficult, if not impossible, by an exclusive therapeutic focus on child maltreatment or youth violence. Poly-victimization occurs equally among males and females and is more common among older youth, according to Finkelhor. Poly-victimization is associated with family disruption and single parent families - but not with poverty or race - Finkelhor asserts, one of the least plausible arguments in the book given the well established association between and among poverty, child maltreatment and single parent family structure.
The most interesting theoretical sections of this book explore possible pathways to poly-victimization: through dangerous family environments characterized by chronic child maltreatment and frequent domestic violence; through family disruption, homelessness and exposure to predatory persons, through dangerous neighborhoods and risky communities and through enduring personal characteristics of the children and youth themselves. Finkelhor hypothesizes that "Some children, for a variety of reasons, appear to act as magnets for victimization," by virtue of irritating temperaments, disabilities and incapacities and/or social stigma and because of behaviors (related to mental health problems) which invite or trigger retaliation.
Finkelhor proposes a developmental model to explain the differential effects of victimization which includes: a child's appraisal of her / his victimization and its meaning, the application of these appraisals to concrete developmental tasks, coping strategies to deal with the aftermath of victimization and environmental buffers. Utilizing this framework, Finkelhor asserts, "we can analyze victimization developmentally for any child by asking (1) how does this child's stage of development affect his or her appraisal, (2) what developmental tasks are at the forefront that may be most prominently impacted, (3) what developmental vocabulary is the stress most likely to be expressed in, and (4) what environmental reactions are likely for this developmental context." Finkelhor is clearly uncomfortable with trauma as the most common organizing concept for understanding the emotional/ behavioral effects of victimization for an obvious reason, i.e., lots of victimization experiences do not qualify as trauma yet have large developmental impacts. Finkelhor asserts that "the study of developmental victimology needs to be expanded substantially from the approach taken in the PTSD literature." Finkelhor wants a discipline of developmental victimology which explores a broad range of victimizations and their effects, especially pandemic victimizations which occur to a majority of children at some point such as peer assault and sibling abuse. Finkelhor stops just short of picking an argument with trauma experts, but he plainly has a different theoretical perspective than trauma theorists and practitioners.
Finkelhor's most provocative chapter is about peer assault and sibling abuse. He comments that surveys indicate that half of children experience violence at the hands of a sibling and a quarter to a third of children are assaulted by a non-sibling peers within any one year. Finkelhor takes dead aim at the assumption that these incidents are mostly minor developmentally normal "kids stuff". Finkelhor maintains that his study of peer and sibling violence found that children, ages 2-5, were more likely to be injured by other children than older children and that "even low frequency peer violence against younger children was significantly associated with elevated trauma symptoms." In addition, Finkelhor found that sibling violence, while often less serious than peer violence, was more likely to be a chronic condition. "Over half of children under 10 years old hit by a sibling in the previous year had experienced five or more such episodes during that year," Finkelhor claims. One fifth of Finkelhor's sample of younger children (under 10 years of age) experienced chronic sibling victimization, "the level at which ( trauma) symptoms increased." Finkelhor believes that parents and schools should be far less tolerant of physical altercations between children of all ages and that CPS social workers should pay more attention to sibling abuse. This is the part of Finkelhor's book most likely to generate heated reactions and possibly lead to substantial changes in social norms, if heeded, given the level of sibling conflict in American families.
Finkelhor revisits the subject of the 15 year decline in child maltreatment, especially sexual abuse and physical abuse, which he has addressed with careful and penetrating analyses in journal articles; and he remains mystified by scholars' and policy makers' lack of interest in the interpretation of this data. Unfortunately, he does not have much to add to the discussion that he and his colleague, Lisa Jones, have not already said so well in their ground breaking articles on this subject.
Finkelhor closes with an interesting and valuable set of proposals for improving child protective service systems. He comments that "law enforcement has devised a successful formula for the creation of a corps of relatively disciplined, well trained and committed professionals who inspire public confidence, using as raw materials individuals who are not particularly highly educated or well paid... They have done this by giving the corps a distinct persona that its members can identify with. They build loyalty through high standards and rigorous training procedures... The child protection system could move toward this model." Finkelhor also advocates for a broader definition of child protection, a definition which would include parent education, prevention and early intervention. Child protection functions should be "leavened" with community service functions, he believes. Finkelhor sees clearly that an effective child protective service system must have a highly committed and socially valued work force which both enforces community norms around parenting and has a role in creating a better community for vulnerable children. System improvements depend critically on work force development and a dramatically different community reputation for child protection work, Finkelhor maintains.
As in all his work, Finkelhor proceeds in a careful analytical way, sorting through explanations, advancing helpful classification systems and making good use of empirical evidence where it exists. Finkelhor has a way of arguing for controversial ideas and proposals in a way which deflects criticism; he is, nevertheless, a stimulating theorist and policy analyst. I question whether in 10 years there will be many developmental victimologists; but in the meantime, Finkelhor has challenged specialists in a way which will hopefully lead to productive and practically important scholarship.

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Children are the most criminally victimized segment of the population, and a substantial number face multiple, serious "poly-victimizations" during a single year. And despite the fact that the priority emphasis in academic research and government policy has traditionally gone to studying juvenile delinquents, children actually appear before authorities more frequently as victims than as offenders. But at the same time, the media and many advocates have failed to note the good news: rates of sexual abuse, child homicide, and many other forms of victimization declined dramatically after the mid-1990s, and some terribly feared forms of child victimization, like stereotypical stranger abduction, are remarkably uncommon. The considerable ignorance about the realities of child victimization can be chalked up to a field that is fragmented, understudied, and subjected to political demagoguery. In this persuasive book, David Finkelhor presents a comprehensive new vision to encompass the prevention, treatment, and study of juvenile victims, unifying conventional subdivisions like child molestation, child abuse, bullying, and exposure to community violence. Developmental victimology, his term for this integrated perspective, looks at child victimization across childhood's span and yields fascinating insights about how to categorize juvenile victimizations, how to think about risk and impact, and how victimization patterns change over the course of development. The book also provides a valuable new model of society's response to child victimization - what Finkelhor calls the Juvenile Victim Justice System - and a fresh way of thinking about barriers that victims and their families encounter when seeking help. These models will be very useful to anyone seeking to improve the way we try to help child victims. Crimes against children still happen far too often, but by proposing a new framework for thinking about the issue, Childhood Victimization opens a promising door to reducing its frequency and improving the response. Professionals, policymakers, and child advocates will find this paradigm-shifting book to be a valuable addition to their shelves.

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Twenty-First Century Psychotherapies: Contemporary Approaches to Theory and Practice Review

Twenty-First Century Psychotherapies: Contemporary Approaches to Theory and Practice
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Lebow's book is truly fascinating. It focuses in an exceptionally clear way on the wide variety of therapies that are currently most significant. What intrigued me is that the book not only delineates the primary characteristics of each of these different therapies; it also makes it shockingly clear how different the effects of these therapies can be on various individuals. I started browsing through the pages of this book and found myself easily drawn in by a style that is far more accessible than is usually found in such a densely packed and knowledgeable work. Because of the comprehensive and cutting edge nature of Lebow's research, previously written books with similar aspirations would seem to be immediately outdated. I believe this book will be of enormous interest to anyone who wants to understand the most significant current therapies and how they might affect the clients who choose to participate in them.

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Praise for Twenty-First Century Psychotherapies
"Jay Lebow has done a masterful job in presenting a lucid overview of the leading theories of psychotherapy, strategies of change, and intervention techniques at the forefront of the field. This outstanding volume is a must-read for seasoned clinicians and trainees alike."—Froma Walsh, Mose & Sylvia Firestone Professor in the School of Social Service Administration, Professor of Psychiatry in the Pritzker School of Medicine, and Codirector of Center for Family Health, The University of Chicago
"This book provides a well-written, up-to-date survey of the theories and practices of psychotherapy that have stood the test of time and seem to be here to stay. A great strength is the chapter authors' inclusion of the evidence for each approach, since Evidence-Based Practice truly is a hallmark of the twenty-first century. This outstanding resource will enable readers to both understand and implement therapy."—Ronald F. Levant, EdD, ABPP, Dean and Professor of Psychology, University of Akron, and 2005 President, American Psychological Association
"Twenty-First Century Psychotherapies offers a remarkably comprehensive, up-to-date, and scholarly examination of the dominant approaches to therapy. Written by leading and articulate experts in each intervention model, this book draws together the most forward-thinking perspectives in individual, group, and couples/family therapy. This will be a treasured reference to novice and experienced clinicians alike, and I expect it to be a much-consulted companion to professionals for many years to come."—Nadine J. Kaslow, PhD, ABPP, Professor and Chief Psychologist, Emory University School of Medicine at Grady Health System
Twenty-First Century Psychotherapies provides thorough coverage of the methods of psychotherapy now held in the highest regard, both for the quality of the research evidence behind them and for their effectiveness with a variety of treatment populations and treatment settings.

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Consultation Skills for Mental Health Professionals Review

Consultation Skills for Mental Health Professionals
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This book was exactly as it was described - brand new, in great condition. Plus, it was over $20 cheaper than what they were selling it for on campus! We haven't used it a lot in my class, so I can't really review the content.

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Consultation interventions are an increasingly popular alternative to clinical practice, allowing the practitioner to interact with and affect many different individuals and organizations. This type of work challenges mental health professionals, drawing on all the skills and resources they may possess, yet also offers some of the greatest rewards and opportunities for service.
Filled with numerous case examples and checklists, Consultation Skills for Mental Health Professionals contains a wealth of information on this important area of practice. It provides a comprehensive source for working with a diverse clientele in a variety of settings, discussing both traditional mental health consultation models and the fast-growing field of organizational consulting.
The guide is divided into four parts:
Individual-Level Consulting Issues takes up individual career assessment and counseling, along with how organizational contexts affect individual jobs; leadership, management, and supervision; executive assessment, selection, interviewing, and development; and executive coaching.
Consulting to Small Systems discusses working with teams and groups; planning and conducting training and teambuilding; diversity in the workplace and in consultation.
Consulting to Large Systems covers how to work with large organizations, including organizational structure, terms, culture, and concepts, as well as processes such as change and resistance; how to assess organizations, and the characteristics of healthy and dysfunctional workplaces; and issues involved in organizational intervention.
Special Consulting Topics include issues such as the practical aspects of running a consulting practice; the skills required for successful clinical consultation; consultation services for special populations; and crisis consultation, including critical incident stress management, psychological first aid, disaster recovery, media communication, and school crisis response.


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Learning From Divorce: How to Take Responsibility, Stop the Blame, and Move On Review

Learning From Divorce: How to Take Responsibility, Stop the Blame, and Move On
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Psychoanalyst Freud describes in his psychoanalytic theory of "repetition-compulsion," our tendency to re-enact earlier experiences for the mind to heal itself of trauma. Philosopher Santayana reminds us that those who ignore the lessons of history are doomed to repeat them. In "Learning from Divorce," divorce attorney-mediator Christie Coates and child custody and parenting evaluator-mediator Bob Lacrosse artfully provide tools for the sometimes painful, always challenging and often rewarding work of self-examination - in the aftermath of divorce. They urge the reader to: consider their role in choosing their partner and in the relationship's "breakup," discard the limiting myths of marriage, understand the divorce grieving process, shed old patterns of blame, and rediscover the authentic self.
"We don't have the luxury of Bill Murray's [wacky weatherman] character in [the movie] Ground Hog Day," the authors remind us. (There simply aren't unlimited chances in real life, to try and try again to "get it right" - to perfect our approaches to meaningful relationships.) "Learning From Divorce" provides powerful insight and practical direction in the HOW of rebuilding after, and even growing from, the often dark experience of divorce.
As a conflict resolution professional assisting couples with this life passage and having experienced firsthand divorce's challenges, I found this book a unique distillation of many earlier researchers' work and at the same time, a fresh look with new approaches and tools. Highly recommended for the layperson and professional alike!

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Social Work Treatment: Interlocking Theoretical Approaches Review

Social Work Treatment: Interlocking Theoretical Approaches
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This is a great book to have especially if you are a student struggling with theories. It is very clear and gives accurate definitions and descriptions of the theories utilized in the field of Social Work. I recommend all Social Work students to purchase the book.

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Casework: A Psychosocial Therapy Review

Casework: A Psychosocial Therapy
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I have been teaching graduate social work for fifteen years and have yet to discover a text about psychosocial casework that surpasses this revised classic in its clarity, depth, thouroughness, and wisdom. The basic psychosocial orientation and typology of casework procedures defined by Florence Hollis remains intact, yet the text, as a whole, is substantially updated by Mary Woods, whose fluid prose is rich in clinical detail, articulate, and aimed at what the practitioner yearns to know and needs to know. As an experienced clinician, I still turn frequently to the chapters on couple and family treatment where protocols for navigating these exceptionally tricky modalities are clearly presented. In chapter 16, for example, Mary Woods develops a typology of "relationships and problems" detailing 12 patterns of couple conflict that, in itself, serves as a primer for the novice practitioner. Approaches to nontraditional couples (premarital couples, unmarried pairs, cross-cultural relationships, and gay and lesbian couples) are amply discussed as well with sensitive consideration of social differentials in power experienced by men and women and by couples of color. The text consistently partializes assessment and techniques of intervention so that one can read and assimilate complex clinical procedures in bite size pieces. Heuristics are laced throughout the text, giving one a feeling of personal guidance. The fifth edition of Casework is a treasure chest for students and teachers of social work and the helping professions to dig into time and time again.

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Known in academic circles as the "bible" for clinical practitioners of social work, Casework: A Psychosocial Therapy introduces readers to the basic theory and principles in the practice of psychosocial therapy, along with attention to the historical development of the approach as it has been enriched and expanded over the years.The authors' approach reflects a balanced focus on people, their environment, and the ways in which people interact with their environment. Essential techniques including how to conduct initial interviews with clients, crisis intervention, arriving at assessments, and choosing appropriate treatment, are thoroughly explained, and often clarified with case studies and vignettes, preparing readers to assess social work clients from a variety of perspectives.The book is designed for the graduate-level student who needs to master the principles, theories, and approaches of the psychosocial approach to applied practice, but it may also be used to fit a variety of courses, including the Introduction to Social Work BSW student who is looking for supplemental information on the basics of clinical practice.Now in its fifth edition, Casework has been thoroughly revised to keep discussions clear and up to date.New material has been added throughout, including a greater variety of case studies, discussions about current topics such as the influence of ethnicity and diversity in the social work practice, changes in family life roles, changes in ideas and practice approaches, and a significantly updated bibliography for reference.

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Exposure Treatments for Anxiety Disorders: A Practitioner's Guide to Concepts, Methods, and Evidence-Based Practice (Practical Clinical Guidebooks) Review

Exposure Treatments for Anxiety Disorders: A Practitioner's Guide to Concepts, Methods, and Evidence-Based Practice (Practical Clinical Guidebooks)
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I used this book often in practice. It is helpful and effective. I appreciate the scenrios given to explain to clients how exposure therapy works.

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Exposure Treatments for Anxiety Disorders is a unique volume, as it draws together the latest research on the rapidly-expanding field of anxiety disorders and illuminates how to correctly apply the proven methodology of behavioral therapy techniques to the variety of situations that face today's mental health professional. That said, cognitive therapy has in the last 10 years gotten increased attention as an alternative to behavior therapy in the treatment of anxiety disorders. But while it is gaining acceptance among practitioners, cognitive therapy has yet to illustrate substantial benefits above those that behavior therapy can already provide. In light of the aforementioned, coupled with the pressure many practitioners feel from managed care paradigms and shrinking healthcare coverage, this book will be a welcome resource allowing for increased clarity of action, accountability, and ultimately, positive client outcome. Each chapter is designed to address pivotal aspects in the assessment, formulation and diagnosis, and treatment of anxiety disorders, to a sufficient depth that the generalist practitioner will be comfortable using this book as a guide when working with the anxiety disordered client.

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Introduction to Psychology and Counseling: Christian Perspectives and Applications Review

Introduction to Psychology and Counseling: Christian Perspectives and Applications
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This is a tremendous book for those interested in Christian counseling. I already own one; I'm buying another for my father who is a pastoral counselor. I am currently a counseling graduate student at John Brown University and the variety of subject material that this book covers is simply amazing. It is by far my favorite counseling book, and I have read dozens. It does not knock science, as unfortunately some Christian counseling theorists do. It recognizes scientific truths, while remaining true to the Bible.

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This standard Christian introduction to psychology has been refined, updated, and reorganized with more information on counseling and ministry applications.

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