|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
Motivational interviewing (MI) is an evidence-based communication
style that has applicability to diverse professions ranging from
mental and physical healthcare to criminal justice. Professionals
use MI to help patients/clients harness their own internal
motivations for change and become active partners in developing
plans for change. Using MI, a professional can guide
patients/clients to make positive changes in life areas such as
substance abuse, criminal activity, anxiety and mood problems, poor
cardiovascular health, and more.
Fundamentals of Motivational Interviewing provides a
straightforward, common-language, and user-friendly guide to key
concepts in MI. The clinical challenges addressed are ubiquitous
across helping professions, and this book is unique in its focus on
providing practical guidance on what to do when confronted with
each challenge. Based on the authors' years of experience providing
training and supervision in MI, this book answers one of the
questions most frequently asked by those they have trained: "How
can I use MI to address insert clinical challenge]?"
Fundamentals of Motivational Interviewing is an accessible and
easy-to-use resource organized and written with the busy provider
in mind. It is appropriate for all skill levels ranging from the MI
novice with no prior training, to the experienced MI provider
seeking to gain new knowledge and skills. Throughout the book the
authors use boxes and case examples to clearly illustrate and
emphasize key points. The authors also provide clear examples of
the sometimes subtle distinction between MI-consistent and
MI-inconsistent use of the communication skills and strategies.
Professionals from diverse disciplines including medicine, allied
health, criminal justice, psychology, counseling, social work,
marriage and family therapy, as well as MI trainers working with
all of these disciplines will find this book a useful resource, and
it would be an appropriate text for any class that seeks to build
MI and other psychotherapeutic skills.
Clinical health psychologists often encounter patients needing
interventions for substance use, yet rarely do practitioners
receive specialized training in this area. Psychological Treatment
of Medical Patients With Harmful Substance Use is designed for
mental health providers in medical settings who need the knowledge
and skills to assess and treat conditions relevant to substance
use. This book is especially useful for mental health providers who
treat adult medical outpatients for whom substance use is not their
primary presenting problem. The authors clarify the distinction
between nonharmful and harmful substance use, describe the signs
and symptoms of substance use disorders, epidemiology, current
models denoting biological and socio-cultural causes, and
contributing factors (with an emphasis on cardiac, cancer, women's
health, and primary care settings). They offer best-practice
assessment strategies, and psychological, self-help and
pharmacological treatments. Chapters also describe assessment and
intervention for conditions that are often comorbid with substance
use, including depression, anxiety, and sleep dysregulation, as
well as treatment for family members who are dealing with a loved
one's harmful substance use, relapse prevention and continuing
care.
|
You may like...
Not available
|