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The Psychotherapist's Own Psychotherapy: Patient and Clinician
Perspectives lifts a curtain that has long shrouded the intimate
alliances between therapists and those of their patients who share
the same profession. In this unique volume, distinguished
contributors explore the multi-faceted nature of the psychotherapy
of psychotherapists from "both sides of the couch." The
first-person narratives, clinical wisdom, and research findings
gathered together in this book offer guidance about providing
effective treatments to therapist patients.
Part I presents multiple theoretical positions that justify and
guide the work of therapists' therapists. In Part II, eminent
therapists write eloquently and intimately about their own
experiences as patients. Their personal reflections offer valuable
insights about what is healing and educational about psychotherapy.
These narratives are followed by several chapters reviewing
scientific research on therapists in personal therapy, including
the first report of relevant findings from a major international
survey of psychotherapists.
In Part III, celebrated therapists from different theoretical
orientations offer guidance on conducting therapy with fellow
therapists. They reflect on the many challenges, dilemmas, and
rewards that arise when two people do the same work. Their chapters
offer wisdom and warnings about such issues as power dynamics,
boundary maintenance, therapist self-disclosure, the termination
process, and the post-termination phase of the relationship. These
first-hand accounts are enhanced by research overviews on coducting
personal treatment, including a new study of American therapists
commissioned for the book. ThePsychotherapist's Own Psychotherapy:
Patient and Clinician Perspectives is an essential resource for
practitioners and students of all orientations and disciplines.
Contemporary psychotherapists have come to realize that, given the
complexity of human behaviour, no one theory can ever suffice to
explain all situations, disorders, and clients. Over the past three
decades, the ideological cold war and "dogma eat dogma" ambience
have abated as clinicians look across and beyond single-school
approaches to see what can be learned - and how patients can
benefit - from alternative orientations. This volume provides a
comprehensive state-of-the-art description of therapeutic
integration and its clincial practices by the leading proponents of
the movement. After presenting the concepts, history, research, and
belief structures of psychotherapy integration, the book considers
two exemplars of theoretical integration, technical eclectism, and
common factors. The authors review integrative therapies for
specific disorders, including anxiety, depression, and borderline
personality disorder, along with integrative treatment modalities,
such as combining individual and family therapy and integrating
pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy. The book concludes with a
section on training and a look at future directions. Replete with
clinical vignettes, this unique handbook is invaluable to
practitioners and researchers alike.
Fully revised and expanded, this third edition of the
Psychologists' Desk Reference includes several new chapters on
emerging topics in psychology and incoporates updates from top
clinicians and program directors in the field. This classic
companion for mental health practioners presents an even larger
variety of information required in daily practice in one easy-to-
use resource. Covering the entire spectrum of practice issues-from
diagnostic codes, practice guidelines, treatment principles, and
report checklists, to insight and advice from today's most
respected clinicians-this peerless reference gives fingertip access
to the whole range of current knowledge. Intended for use by all
mental health professionals, the Desk Reference covers assessment
and diagnosis, testing and psychometrics, treatment and
psychotherapy, biology and pharmacotherapy, self-help resources,
ethical and legal issues, forensic practice, financial and
insurance matters, and prevention and cosultation. Chapters have
been clearly written by master clinicians and include easy-to-read
checklists and tables as well as helpful advice. Filled with
information psychologists use everyday, the Psychologists' Desk
Reference, Third Edition, will be the most important and widely
used volume in the library of psychologists, social workers, and
counselors everywhere.
This book provides detailed guidance on assessing and accommodating
patient preferences for the psychotherapist, the therapeutic
approach, and treatment activities. Blending empirical research and
clinical expertise into easy-to-read advice, Drs. John Norcross and
Mick Cooper offer multiple strategies for routinely assessing
preferences as they evolve over the course of therapy, focusing
primarily on strong likes and dislikes. They describe multiple
tools for rapidly and reliably measuring preferences in session,
including their Cooper-Norcross Inventory of Preferences (C-NIP).
Four key strategies for accommodating a client's preferences are
explored in depth: adopting them into treatment, adapting the
therapist's approach, exploring alternative preferences, and
referring the patient to another practitioner if necessary. The
authors describe the limitations of personalization and how to
avoid common errors, such as therapists assuming they know what
clients want. Training and supervision strategies are also
featured. Clinical cases and patient-therapist dialogues
demonstrate how to evaluate and integrate client preferences in a
respectful, ethical, and professional manner that leads to enhanced
alliances and improved outcomes.
Change is hard. But not if you know the five-step formula that
works whether you're trying to stop smoking or start recycling. Dr.
John C. Norcross, an internationally recognized expert, has studied
how people make transformative, permanent changes in their lives.
Over the past thirty years, he and his research team have helped
thousands of people overcome dozens of behavioural ailments, and
now his revolutionary scientific approach to personal improvement
is available in this indispensable guide. Unlike the overwhelming
majority of self-help books, the Changeology plan has a documented
track record of success. Whether you want to quit overeating or
drinking, or end depression, debt, and relationship distress, Dr.
Norcross gives you the tools you need to change within 90 days.
Changeology shows you how to define your goals, pump up your
motivation, prevent relapses, and master the skills that will help
you sustain change. In addition, you can personalize your journey
with Check Yourself assessments and helpful tools on the author's
interactive website, ChangeologyBook.com. Whatever your goal or
resolution, Changeology will help you achieve a life filled with
greater health and happiness.
While we know that psychotherapy works, there is hearty debate
about what makes it work. In the past, rival arguments have
maintained that psychotherapy proves effective because of the
treatment approach, patient contributions, or the therapeutic
relationship. Psychotherapy Skills and Methods That Work argues
that clinical skills and methods also play a crucial role and that
what therapists do has major consequences for improving practice.
Psychotherapy Skills and Methods That Work is the result of a
multiyear, interorganizational Task Force commissioned to identify,
compile, and disseminate the research evidence and clinical
practices on psychotherapist skills and methods used across
theoretical orientations. Edited by renowned scholars Clara E. Hill
and John C. Norcross, this book provides original research reviews
on the effectiveness of 27 specific psychotherapy skills and
methods, including affirmation, self-disclosure, role induction,
between-session homework, empathic reflections, mindfulness and
acceptance, emotion regulation, and cognitive restructuring. Each
chapter on a therapy skill or method features clinical examples,
diversity considerations, training implications, and bulleted
therapeutic practices, while the final chapter summarizes the
research evidence for the effectiveness of these skills/methods and
emphasizes implications for clinical training and practice.
Forcefully demonstrating what therapists do to help clients change
and live more effective lives, Psychotherapy Skills and Methods
That Work will serve as a go-to guide for psychotherapy
practitioners of all persuasions and professions, as well as
graduate students and psychotherapy researchers.
First published in 2002, the landmark Psychotherapy Relationships
That Work broke new ground by focusing renewed and corrective
attention on the substantial research behind the crucial (but often
overlooked) client-therapist relationship. This highly cited,
widely adopted classic is now presented in two volumes:
Evidence-based Therapist Contributions, edited by John C. Norcross
and Michael J. Lambert; and Evidence-based Therapist
Responsiveness, edited by John C. Norcross and Bruce E. Wampold.
Each chapter in the two volumes features a specific therapist
behavior that improves treatment outcome, or a transdiagnostic
patient characteristic by which clinicians can effectively tailor
psychotherapy. In addition to updates to existing chapters, the
third edition features new chapters on the real relationship,
emotional expression, immediacy, therapist self-disclosure,
promoting treatment credibility, and adapting therapy to the
patient's gender identity and sexual orientation. All chapters
provide original meta-analyses, clinical examples, landmark
studies, diversity considerations, training implications, and most
importantly, research-infused therapeutic practices by
distinguished contributors. Featuring expanded coverage and an
enhanced practice focus, the third edition of the seminal
Psychotherapy Relationships That Work offers a compelling synthesis
of the best available research, clinical expertise, and patient
characteristics in the tradition of evidence-based practice. Like
the original, this new edition is "A veritable gold mine of
research related to relationships, a volume that should be an
invaluable reference for every student and practitioner of
psychotherapy" (Psychotherapy).
Comprehensive, systematic, and balanced, Systems of Psychotherapy
uses a wealth of clinical cases to help readers understand a wide
variety of psychotherapies - including psychodynamic, existential,
experiential, interpersonal, exposure, behavioral, cognitive, third
wave, systemic, multicultural, and integrative. The ninth edition
of this landmark text thoroughly analyzes 15 leading systems of
psychotherapy and briefly surveys another 32, providing students
and practitioners with a broad overview of the discipline. The book
explores each system's theory of personality, theory of
psychopathology, and resulting therapeutic process and therapy
relationship. Through these explorations the authors clearly
demonstrate how psychotherapy systems agree on the processes
producing change while diverging on the elements in need of change.
Additionally, the authors present cogent criticisms of each
approach from cognitive-behavioral, psychoanalytic, humanistic,
cultural, and integrative perspectives. This ninth edition features
updated meta-analytic reviews of the effectiveness of each system,
new sections on Lacanian analysis, mentalization therapy, and
psychotherapy with gender nonconforming people, as well as new
sections and updates throughout the text.
Hailed by one reviewer as "the bible of the integration movement,"
the inaugural edition of Handbook of Psychotherapy Integration was
the first compilation of the early integrative approaches to
therapy. Since its publication psychotherapy integration has grown
into a mature, empirically supported, and international movement,
and the current edition provides a comprehensive review of what has
been done. Reflecting the considerable advances in the field since
the previous edition's release in 2005, this third edition of
Handbook of Psychotherapy Integration continues to be the
state-of-the-art description of psychotherapy integration and its
clinical practices by some of its most distinguished proponents.
Six chapters new to this edition describe growing areas of
psychotherapy research and practice: common factors therapy,
principle-based integration, integrative psychotherapy with
children, mixing psychotherapy and self-help, integrating research
and practice, and international themes. The latter two of these
constitute contemporary thrusts in the integration movement:
blending research and practice, and recognizing its international
nature. Also closely examined are the concepts, history, training,
research, global themes, and future of psychotherapy integration.
Each chapter includes a new section on cultural considerations, and
an emphasis is placed throughout the volume on outcome research.
Charting the remarkable evolution of psychotherapy integration
itself, the third edition of this Handbook will continue to prove
invaluable to practitioners, researchers, and students alike.
Featuring expert advice for applying to graduate school in clinical
and counseling psychology--as well as profiles of 320 doctoral
programs--this authoritative resource has now been updated for
2024/2025. This is the book that students rely on for finding the
programs that meet their needs and maximizing their chances of
getting in. Profiles encapsulate each program's specializations or
tracks, admission requirements, acceptance rates, financial aid,
research areas, and clinical opportunities. A detailed time line
and multiple worksheets help students decide where to apply, build
their credentials, develop strong applications, and make an
informed final decision. The 2024/2025 edition discusses current
developments in admissions, including the increase in GRE-optional
programs and how to navigate choices around testing.
Everyone, it seems, is talking and arguing about Evidence-Based
Practice (EBP). Those therapies and assessments designated as EBP
increasingly determine what is taught, researched, and reimbursed
in health care. But exactly what is it, and how do you do it? The
second edition of Clinician's Guide to Evidence-Based Practices is
the concise, practitioner-friendly guide to applying EBPs in mental
health. Step-by-step it explains how to conduct the entire EBP
process-asking the right questions, accessing the best available
research, appraising the research, translating that research into
practice, integrating that research with clinician expertise and
patient characteristics, evaluating the entire enterprise,
attending to the ethical considerations, and when done, moving the
EBP process forward by teaching and disseminating it. This book
will help you: * Formulate useful questions that research can
address * Search the research literature efficiently for best
practices * Make sense out of the research morass, sifting wheat
from chaff * Incorporate patient values and diversity into the
selection of EBP * Blend clinician expertise with the research
evidence * Translate empirical research into practice * Ensure that
your clients receive effective, research-supported services *
Infuse the EBP process into your organizational setting and
training methods * Identify and integrate ethics in the context of
EBP Coauthored by a distinguished quartet of clinicians,
researchers, and a health care librarian, the Clinician's Guide has
become the classic for graduate students and busy professionals
mastering EBP.
Self-help is big business, but alas, not always a scientific one.
Self-help books, websites, and movies abound and are important
sources of psychological advice for millions of Americans. But how
can you sift through them to find the ones that work?
Self-Help That Works is an indispensable guide that enables readers
to identify effective self-help materials and distinguish them from
those that are potentially misleading or even harmful. Six
scientist-practitioners bring careful research, expertise, and a
dozen national studies to the task of choosing and recommending
self-help resources.
Designed for both laypersons and mental-health professionals, this
book critically reviews multiple types of self-help resources, from
books and autobiographies to films, online programs, support
groups, and websites, for 41 different behavioral disorders and
life challenges. The revised edition of this award-winning book now
features online self-help resources, expanded content, and new
chapters focusing on autism, bullying, chronic pain, GLB issues,
happiness, and nonchemical addictions. Each chapter updates the
self-help resources launched since the previous edition and expands
the material. The final chapters provide key strategies for
consumers evaluating self-help as well as for professionals
integrating self-help into treatment.
All told, this updated edition of Self-Help that Works evaluates
more than 2,000 self-help resources and brings together the
collective wisdom of nearly 5,000 mental health professionals.
Whether seeking self-help for yourself, loved ones, or patients,
this is the go-to, research-based guide with the best advice on
what works.
Mental health professionals provide better care to their clients
when they care for themselves. This acclaimed highly practical
guide--now revised and expanded with even more self-care
strategies--helps busy psychotherapists balance their personal and
professional lives. The book presents 13 research-informed
self-care strategies and offers concrete methods for integrating
them into daily life. Featuring examples and insights from master
therapists, every chapter concludes with a self-care checklist.
Infused with a positive message of self-renewal and growth, the
book shows clinicians how to leave distress at the office and tend
actively to their physical, emotional, and spiritual needs. New to
This Edition *Chapter on mindfulness and self-compassion.
*Increased emphasis on simple, real-time self-care activities. *New
examples from additional master therapists and hundreds of workshop
participants. *Up-to-date research findings on therapist stress and
resilience. *Discussions of competence constellations, building on
self-care strengths, moral stress, deliberate practice, presession
preparation, journaling, and multiculturalism.
First published in 2002, the landmark Psychotherapy Relationships
That Work broke new ground by focusing renewed and corrective
attention on the substantial research behind the crucial (but often
overlooked) client-therapist relationship. This highly cited,
widely adopted classic is now presented in two volumes:
Evidence-based Therapist Contributions, edited by John C. Norcross
and Michael J. Lambert; and Evidence-based Therapist
Responsiveness, edited by John C. Norcross and Bruce E. Wampold.
Each chapter in the two volumes features a specific therapist
behavior that improves treatment outcome, or a transdiagnostic
patient characteristic by which clinicians can effectively tailor
psychotherapy. In addition to updates to existing chapters, the
third edition features new chapters on the real relationship,
emotional expression, immediacy, therapist self-disclosure,
promoting treatment credibility, and adapting therapy to the
patient's gender identity and sexual orientation. All chapters
provide original meta-analyses, clinical examples, landmark
studies, diversity considerations, training implications, and most
importantly, research-infused therapeutic practices by
distinguished contributors. Featuring expanded coverage and an
enhanced practice focus, the third edition of the seminal
Psychotherapy Relationships That Work offers a compelling synthesis
of the best available research, clinical expertise, and patient
characteristics in the tradition of evidence-based practice. Like
the original, this new edition is "A veritable gold mine of
research related to relationships, a volume that should be an
invaluable reference for every student and practitioner of
psychotherapy" (Psychotherapy).
This book presents integrative supervision applicable to
integrative and single-system psychotherapy alike. Distinctive
features include its synthesis of supervisory methods aligned with
multiple theoretical traditions, a research-informed fit of
supervision to the individuality of the supervisee, its insistence
on frequent feedback from both clients and trainees, and a modeling
of the philosophical pluralism and pragmatic flexibility of
integration itself. In reviewing videotaped therapy sessions,
integrative supervisors offer key insights into common problems,
demonstrate how to adjust treatment to clients' transdiagnostic
needs, and guide trainees to clinical competence. Includes
transcripts from actual supervision sessions and commentaries from
the authors' companion DVD, Integrative Psychotherapy Supervision.
Published 20 years ago, the first edition of History of
Psychotherapy (1992) is still considered the most comprehensive and
authoritative resource on the subject. Building on the success of
its predecessor, this new edition provides timely updates to
reflect both the continuity and change in psychotherapy and
features additional theory, research, practice, and training.
Focusing on critical turning points, 78 eminent authors examine the
impact of social, cultural, and economic factors on the development
of psychotherapy. Each chapter highlights the historical roots,
current manifestations, and future directions of the field. New to
this edition are discussions on the emergence of multiculturalism,
neuroscience, couples therapy, pharmacotherapy, spirituality and
religion, and specialized research centers. Scholarly but engaging,
comprehensive but accessible, this updated classic will prove ideal
for students, practitioners, and libraries alike.
Featuring expert advice for applying to graduate school in clinical
and counseling psychology--as well as profiles of 320 doctoral
programs--this authoritative resource has now been updated for
2024/2025. This is the book that students rely on for finding the
programs that meet their needs and maximizing their chances of
getting in. Profiles encapsulate each program's specializations or
tracks, admission requirements, acceptance rates, financial aid,
research areas, and clinical opportunities. A detailed time line
and multiple worksheets help students decide where to apply, build
their credentials, develop strong applications, and make an
informed final decision. The 2024/2025 edition discusses current
developments in admissions, including the increase in GRE-optional
programs and how to navigate choices around testing.
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