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Working in any area of mental health nursing presents complex
issues regarding the nurse-patient relationship. For those working
in prolonged clinical contact with offenders, relationships with
patients and colleagues can be particularly emotionally intense and
sometimes difficult to express. This book attempts to understand
and articulate the emotional labour of forensic nursing and
explores the challenge of establishing and maintaining therapeutic
relationships with offenders. The first book to consider the
emotional and relational component of forensic mental health
nursing, the chapters cover a number of specialist forensic areas
from this psychodynamic perspective, such as women's services,
services for people with personality disorders, intensive care,
high security psychiatric hospitals, medium secure units and
services for adolescent offenders. A chapter on therapeutic
communities is also included, along with chapters on challenging
relational phenomena such as working with hate and the difficulties
of managing difference when working in environments that produce
high levels of anxiety. Therapeutic Relationships with Offenders
provides essential information for mental health nurses working in
the forensic field and will be of interest to any professionals
working with challenging populations and people with personality
disorders.
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30 Years of Social Change (Paperback)
Stephen Jones; Foreword by Jessica Kingsley; Contributions by Dr Anthony Attwood, Luke Beardon, Nisha Dogra, …
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R472
Discovery Miles 4 720
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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What social change has been achieved over the past 30 years? What
have been the main barriers to progress? What great achievements
can we identify and celebrate today? Marking Jessica Kingsley
Publishers' 30th year of publishing books on social and behavioural
issues, this book gathers together over 30 leading thinkers from
diverse disciplines - from autism specialists and social workers
through to trans rights activists and complementary therapists.
Contributors provide a thoughtful account of how their field of
expertise has changed over the past 30 years, and how they see it
evolving in the future. Offering a unique insight into many
professions, 30 Years of Social Change highlights much of the
positive social change achieved in the past 30 years across these
fields and the challenges we face in the future.
As a psychodynamic theory of both normal development and
psychopathology, attachment theory has particular utility for
forensic psychiatry. A Matter of Security provides an attachment
theory based account of the development of arousal and affect
regulation, which offers a new way of thinking about mental
disorders in offenders. This book also discusses the development of
personality in terms of interpersonal functioning and relationships
with others, which is essential to understanding both interpersonal
violence and abnormal personality development. Attachment theory
also offers a model of therapeutic work with patients that have
particular resonance with forensic work because it uses the
language of security. This collection focuses on attachment theory
applied to forensic psychiatry and psychotherapy.
Personality Disorder offers a comprehensive and accessible
collection of papers that will be practically useful to
practitioners working in secure and non-secure settings with
patients who have personality disorders. This book brings together
fourteen classic papers, which address the impact that working with
personality disorder patients can have on staff. It also offers
theoretical explanations for personality disorder, and explores
other issues such as the concept of boundaries in clinical
practice, psychiatric staff as attachment figures and the
relationship between severity of personality disorder and childhood
experiences. Each paper is introduced with contextual material, and
is followed by a series of questions that are intended to be used
as educational exercises. This book will be essential reading for
clinical and forensic psychologists, psychiatrists, community
psychiatric nurses, social workers and students.
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Forgiveness in Practice (Paperback)
Stephen Hance; Contributions by Howard Cooper, Anthony Bash, Reza Shah-Kazemi, Vajragupta, …
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R771
Discovery Miles 7 710
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Forgiveness has often viewed as a religious obligation but is
increasingly being advocated as a means of healing, release and
promoting wellbeing. Forgiveness is variously viewed as a duty,
virtue or cure, but when it comes to practising forgiveness in real
life we find it is always caught up in the complexity of the
situation. This book shines a light on how we tend to think about
forgiveness in practice, including examples from social work,
family therapy, chaplaincy and criminal justice. The book contains
many different perspectives on how we think about forgiveness,
including overviews of four major religions and reflections from
those working in the healing professions. Without advocating a
particular approach this book raises important questions around
self-forgiveness and forgiving institutions and encourages the
reader to think again about forgiveness and how it impacts,
challenges and transforms relationships.
People who use forensic mental health services are defined by the
fact that they have violated boundaries, often in many ways. For
clinicians employed to work therapeutically with this client group
however, the capacity to initiate and maintain boundaries is
critical to safety as well as to good treatment outcomes. This book
provides a thorough introduction to the subject of professional and
therapeutic boundaries and their particular complexities within
forensic mental health settings. The contributors, all experts in
their respective fields, address the challenges of establishing
working boundaries within forensic mental health services from
multiple perspectives. They explore the ways in which boundaries
can be initiated and maintained in different areas of forensic
mental health work, including in psychotherapy, mental health
nursing, arts therapies, forensic psychiatry and family therapy,
and when working with different client groups, including children
and adolescents, offenders with severe personality disorders in
high security settings and sex offenders. Consideration is also
given to boundaries and homicide, maternal boundary violations and
boundaries in a forensic learning disability service. This
authoritative, interdisciplinary resource will support all forensic
mental health practitioners in this crucial aspect of their work.
This groundbreaking book explores the psychodynamics and
socio-politics of the forensic therapeutic milieu, addressing some
of the most difficult and complex issues facing practitioners. It
sets out a psycho-social framework for understanding the
predicament and the needs of those who live in and those who work
in forensic mental health settings. It brings to life the thinking
of those working on the frontline in an increasingly difficult and
hostile environment, and draws together fresh and stimulating
approaches to engagement with highly complex individuals who
present challenges to traditional models of psychiatric assessment
and treatment. Contributors with considerable clinical experience
and expertise from a range of disciplines consider the ethical,
emotional and intellectual challenges of their work, and describe
ways in which genuine containment and change can be achieved
despite numerous perceived assaults on therapeutic relationships,
and on the therapeutic milieu itself. Combining clinical case
studies with organisational perspectives and clear descriptions of
theoretical processes, they explore key issues including the
challenges of maintaining role-appropriate, 'boundaried'
relationships; the tensions between public protection and
individual confidentiality; questions of risk and responsibility;
duty of care and respect for individual liberty; the challenges
posed by inter-professional tensions and rivalries; as well as
specific clinical dilemmas. The difficulties they experience in
fulfilling specific therapeutic roles in the face of uncertainties
about the funding and commissioning of their services are
addressed, and the final part of the book outlines some of the ways
in which individuals, particular services and whole organisations
may protect themselves when under attack. This unique and highly
original book is essential reading for all those working, or
training to work, in both forensic and non-forensic inpatient
therapeutic milieux and for academics and lay readers interested in
the societal dynamics of inclusion and exclusion that are
replicated and magnified in these settings.
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