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This book offers a radically different perspective on the topic of
health inequity. Carey, Tai, and Griffiths use Perceptual Control
Theory (PCT) to deconstruct current approaches to understanding,
investigating, and addressing problems of health inequity. In the
book, the authors propose that health inequity is not a problem per
se. Disrupted control, they argue, is the problem that needs to be
addressed. From this perspective, research, policy, and health
practices directed at addressing health inequity in isolation will
offer only partial solutions to the problems created by disrupted
control. Addressing problems of disrupted control directly,
however, has the potential to entirely resolve issues that are
created by health inequity. The authors have extensive clinical and
research experience in a wide range of contexts, including:
cross-cultural settings; rural, remote, and underserved
communities; community mental health settings; prisons; schools;
and psychiatric wards. Drawing on these diverse experiences, the
authors describe how adopting a Perceptual Control Theory
perspective might offer promising new directions for researchers
and practitioners who have an interest in addressing issues of
inequity and social justice. With a Foreword written by Professor
Neil Gilbert this book will provide fresh insights for academics,
practitioners, and policymakers in the fields of public health,
psychology, social policy, and healthcare.
Disability Incarcerated gathers thirteen contributions from an
impressive array of fields. Taken together, these essays assert
that a complex understanding of disability is crucial to an
understanding of incarceration, and that we must expand what has
come to be called 'incarceration.' The chapters in this book
examine a host of sites, such as prisons, institutions for people
with developmental disabilities, psychiatric hospitals, treatment
centers, special education, detention centers, and group homes;
explore why various sites should be understood as incarceration;
and discuss the causes and effects of these sites historically and
currently. This volume includes a preface by Professor Angela Y.
Davis and an afterword by Professor Robert McRuer.
Inappropriate health care is an escalating and expensive problem.
It affects high income, middle income, and low income countries and
wastes billions of dollars annually as well as harming individuals
and communities. Inappropriate care refers to both the overuse and
underuse of tests and treatments and, ironically, can occur
concurrently within the same health system. Even though
patient-centred care is still the prevailing ethos, specifying
where patients should be situated geographically has not required
health professionals to consider the preferences, values, and
priorities of patients when making treatment decisions.
Patient-perspective care demands that the decisions health
professionals make are in the service of patient's goals. Health
care, ultimately, is helping individuals to live the lives they
would wish for themselves. In order to meet this imperative, health
professionals must work towards understanding what their patients
would like to achieve through their engagement with health
services. This book details the extent and scope of inappropriate
care and how we have arrived in this position. The necessity for
patient-perspective care is outlined and provides a theoretical
framework that explains why patient-perspective care is so
critical. The implications of this theory are then explored and
specific strategies for moving towards a patient-perspective
approach are discussed. This book is entirely original and
describes a novel, fresh approach to delivering health services.
Many long-standing and expensive problems such as missed
appointments will disappear and patients will be more satisfied
with the treatments they receive. Health services generally will be
more efficient and effective leading to more sustainable and
affordable health care.
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) is the treatment of choice for
most mental health problems. Each different problem is usually
treated by a different model of CBT. Yet evidence tells us that the
same processes are responsible for long term distress in us all.
This handy manual draws on evidence and theory to provide the key
principles to aid change and recovery. The transdiagnostic approach
is supported by a wealth of evidence that processes such as worry,
emotion suppression, self-criticism and avoidance maintain distress
across psychological disorders. Perceptual Control Theory (PCT)
explains all of these processes as forms of 'inflexible control',
and Method of Levels Therapy (MOL) helps people to let go of these
habits. The principles and techniques of MOL are clearly and
practically described for clinicians to offer a transdiagnostic CBT
that is tailor-made to the goals of each client. This novel volume
will be essential reading for novice and experienced CBT
therapists, as well as counsellors and psychotherapists. Its
accessible explanation of Perceptual Control Theory and its
application to real world problems also makes a useful resource for
undergraduates, graduates and researchers in psychology.
Inappropriate health care is an escalating and expensive problem.
It affects high income, middle income, and low income countries and
wastes billions of dollars annually as well as harming individuals
and communities. Inappropriate care refers to both the overuse and
underuse of tests and treatments and, ironically, can occur
concurrently within the same health system. Even though
patient-centred care is still the prevailing ethos, specifying
where patients should be situated geographically has not required
health professionals to consider the preferences, values, and
priorities of patients when making treatment decisions.
Patient-perspective care demands that the decisions health
professionals make are in the service of patient's goals. Health
care, ultimately, is helping individuals to live the lives they
would wish for themselves. In order to meet this imperative, health
professionals must work towards understanding what their patients
would like to achieve through their engagement with health
services. This book details the extent and scope of inappropriate
care and how we have arrived in this position. The necessity for
patient-perspective care is outlined and provides a theoretical
framework that explains why patient-perspective care is so
critical. The implications of this theory are then explored and
specific strategies for moving towards a patient-perspective
approach are discussed. This book is entirely original and
describes a novel, fresh approach to delivering health services.
Many long-standing and expensive problems such as missed
appointments will disappear and patients will be more satisfied
with the treatments they receive. Health services generally will be
more efficient and effective leading to more sustainable and
affordable health care.
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) is the treatment of choice for
most mental health problems. Each different problem is usually
treated by a different model of CBT. Yet evidence tells us that the
same processes are responsible for long term distress in us all.
This handy manual draws on evidence and theory to provide the key
principles to aid change and recovery. The transdiagnostic approach
is supported by a wealth of evidence that processes such as worry,
emotion suppression, self-criticism and avoidance maintain distress
across psychological disorders. Perceptual Control Theory (PCT)
explains all of these processes as forms of 'inflexible control',
and Method of Levels Therapy (MOL) helps people to let go of these
habits. The principles and techniques of MOL are clearly and
practically described for clinicians to offer a transdiagnostic CBT
that is tailor-made to the goals of each client. This novel volume
will be essential reading for novice and experienced CBT
therapists, as well as counsellors and psychotherapists. Its
accessible explanation of Perceptual Control Theory and its
application to real world problems also makes a useful resource for
undergraduates, graduates and researchers in psychology.
Disability Incarcerated gathers thirteen contributions from an
impressive array of fields. Taken together, these essays assert
that a complex understanding of disability is crucial to an
understanding of incarceration, and that we must expand what has
come to be called 'incarceration.' The chapters in this book
examine a host of sites, such as prisons, institutions for people
with developmental disabilities, psychiatric hospitals, treatment
centers, special education, detention centers, and group homes;
explore why various sites should be understood as incarceration;
and discuss the causes and effects of these sites historically and
currently. This volume includes a preface by Professor Angela Y.
Davis and an afterword by Professor Robert McRuer.
Since its original appearance in 1977, Advanced Organic Chemistry
has maintained its place as the premier textbook in the field,
offering broad coverage of the structure, reactivity and synthesis
of organic compounds. As in the earlier editions, the text contains
extensive references to both the primary and review literature and
provides examples of data and reactions that illustrate and
document the generalizations. While the text assumes completion of
an introductory course in organic chemistry, it reviews the
fundamental concepts for each topic that is discussed. The two-part
fifth edition has been substantially revised and reorganized for
greater clarity. Among the changes: Updated material reflecting
advances in the field since 2001 's Fourth Edition, especially in
computational chemistry; A companion Web site provides digital
models for study of structure, reaction and selectivity; Solutions
to the exercises provided to instructors online. The material in
Part A is organized on the basis of fundamental structural topics
such as structure, stereochemistry, conformation and aromaticity
and basic mechanistic types, including nucleophilic substitution,
addition reactions, carbonyl chemistry, aromatic substitution and
free radical reactions. Together with Part B: Reaction and
Synthesis, the two volumes are intended to provide the advanced
undergraduate or beginning graduate student in chemistry with a
sufficient foundation to comprehend and use the research literature
in organic chemistry.
Many current approaches to the treatment of psychological problems
focus on specific disorders and techniques that are purported to be
effective and distinct. Recent advances in knowledge and theory,
however, have called into question this approach. The conceptual
framework of transdiagnostic, rather than disorder specific,
processes is gaining traction. Alongside this has been the call to
focus on evidence-based principles rather than evidence-based
practices and techniques. The rationale behind this is that many
apparently unique and innovative practices are usually the
reflection of common underlying principles. This book describes
three foundational principles that are key to understanding both
the rise and the resolution of psychological distress.
Principles-Based Counselling and Psychotherapy promotes a Method of
Levels (MOL) approach to counselling and psychotherapy. Using
clinical examples and vignettes to help practitioners implement a
principles-based approach, this book describes three fundamental
principles for effective therapeutic practice and their clinical
implications. The first chapter of the book provides a rationale
for the principles-based approach. The second chapter describes the
three principles of control, conflict, and reorganisation and how
they relate to each other from within a robust theory of physical
and psychological functioning. The remainder of the book covers
important aspects of psychological treatment such as the
therapeutic relationship, appointment scheduling, and the change
process from the application of these three principles. With
important implications for all therapeutic approaches,
Principles-Based Counselling and Psychotherapy will be an
invaluable resource for psychotherapists, counsellors and clinical
psychologists in practice and training. It provides clarity about
their role, and a means for providing a resolution to psychological
distress and improving the effectiveness of their practice.
Many current approaches to the treatment of psychological problems
focus on specific disorders and techniques that are purported to be
effective and distinct. Recent advances in knowledge and theory,
however, have called into question this approach. The conceptual
framework of transdiagnostic, rather than disorder specific,
processes is gaining traction. Alongside this has been the call to
focus on evidence-based principles rather than evidence-based
practices and techniques. The rationale behind this is that many
apparently unique and innovative practices are usually the
reflection of common underlying principles. This book describes
three foundational principles that are key to understanding both
the rise and the resolution of psychological distress.
Principles-Based Counselling and Psychotherapy promotes a Method of
Levels (MOL) approach to counselling and psychotherapy. Using
clinical examples and vignettes to help practitioners implement a
principles-based approach, this book describes three fundamental
principles for effective therapeutic practice and their clinical
implications. The first chapter of the book provides a rationale
for the principles-based approach. The second chapter describes the
three principles of control, conflict, and reorganisation and how
they relate to each other from within a robust theory of physical
and psychological functioning. The remainder of the book covers
important aspects of psychological treatment such as the
therapeutic relationship, appointment scheduling, and the change
process from the application of these three principles. With
important implications for all therapeutic approaches,
Principles-Based Counselling and Psychotherapy will be an
invaluable resource for psychotherapists, counsellors and clinical
psychologists in practice and training. It provides clarity about
their role, and a means for providing a resolution to psychological
distress and improving the effectiveness of their practice.
The two-part, fifth edition of Advanced Organic Chemistry has been
substantially revised and reorganized for greater clarity. The
material has been updated to reflect advances in the field since
the previous edition, especially in computational chemistry. Part B
describes the most general and useful synthetic reactions,
organized on the basis of reaction type. It can stand-alone;
together, with Part A: Structure and Mechanisms, the two volumes
provide a comprehensive foundation for the study in organic
chemistry. Companion websites provide digital models for students
and exercise solutions for instructors.
Based on Perceptual Control Theory, PCT (explained in the
foreword), this therapeutic method, called The Method of Levels
(MOL) leaves the patient in control with no interference from the
therapist.
Author Tim Carey shows how you can ask very simple questions
about background thoughts to assist a friend in distress. Without
offering advice or commentary of any kind, you can help your
trusting friend review his or her problem, finding his or her own
solution by "going up a level," looking at his or her own internal
conflict "from above" and finding ways to resolve it by changing
his or her sense of what is important-changing how he or she looks
at the internal conflict.
While working for Scotland's National Health Service Dr. Carey
used the approach described in this book exclusively with his
primary care patients. Some of his colleagues learned MOL from Dr.
Carey and used it too. MOL achieved a new level of service
efficiency such that a 15 month waiting list was reduced to 0
months.
From a review by Kalen Hammann: I've just finished the Method of
Levels, and I'm astonished, delighted, and inspired. I was a
psychotherapist for many years, using a variety of approaches
(predominantly Gestalt Therapy, several versions of family therapy,
and more recently Psychology of Mind), and while my clients were
often happy with the results, I frequently wasn't. My fundamental
dissatisfaction arose from the fact that I never knew WHY we were
successful when we were, and what had gone wrong or failed to go
right when we weren't. Now I think maybe at last I know.
Have you ever wondered how learning happens? Control in the
Classroom introduces the main ideas of a profound explanation of
human behavior and then applies these ideas to the issue of
curriculum delivery. This illuminating explanation, known as
Perceptual Control Theory, shows that control is the fundamental
phenomenon at the core of the business of living. Control is
critical in the classroom both for teachers and for students.
From this perspective, teaching can be considered to be a
process of helping students develop greater control capabilities.
The first part of the book introduces the theory in an
easy-to-read, light-hearted style. Through an abundance of examples
the principles of the theory are applied both to classroom activity
and life in general. You might even discover that understanding
this theory helps you in other areas of your life, not only in
teaching. The second part of the book addresses specific aspects of
curriculum delivery such as lesson plans and goal setting. Forms
are provided to help you develop expertise in this approach.
Examples of completed forms are included as well.
This exciting and intriguing book will be an invaluable resource
for both inexperienced and seasoned teachers. Any educator who
wants to improve life in the classroom by taking a
behind-the-scenes peek at what might be going on when students
learn will be delighted with this book. By taking some time to
understand the important principles and becoming familiar with the
suggested forms and practices, teachers will be able to help
themselves and their students have more rewarding experiences in
the classroom. With this book in your collection, walking into your
classroom really will be embarking on an adventure in learning and
achievement.
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Jamie (Paperback)
Eileen T. Carey; Illustrated by Brian A. Carey
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R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Jamie is the story of a little girl, her rag doll and her
relationship with her Grandpa. Her parents were killed in an
automobile accident and her grandfather, who had nothing but love
to give her, raised her. He taught her compassion, sportsmanship
and consideration for others. When their boat sank and they met
Teddy their lives changed forever. Teddy, a rich financier, took
them in and helped them get started. They became a part of his
family. Jamie had a wonderful voice and she went from signing on a
corner at five years old to raise money to buy food, to a singing
career. Read how so many lives are touched by Jamie. She also felt
that her rag doll, Josie, always brought her good luck. You will
want to read this story over and over again.
We are all controlling people. In fact our feelings of wellbeing
depend on staying in control. Just as when we drive a car, we must
stay in control in everyday life in order to keep the things we
care about going in the right direction.Yet this natural
controlling behavior is sometimes the very reason we end up losing
control. This happens when we try to control other people as well
as when we try to control ourselves.So how do we do better?Based on
Perceptual Control Theory (PCT), this entertaining and enlightening
book by psychologists Richard S. Marken and Timothy A. Carey
explores the paradox of why we often lose control by trying to be
in control and why our controlling nature makes it difficult to
stop this self-defeating behavior. They show that understanding PCT
opens the window to understanding and learning about ourselves as
controlling people and equips us to lead more effective and
satisfying lives.
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