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Trichotillomania (TTM) is a complex disorder that is difficult to
treat and few effective therapeutic options exist. This Therapist
Guide for the Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) Enhanced
Behavior Therapy for Trichotillomania (AEBT-T), and the
accompanying client workbook, is a 10-session program designed to
teach therapists how to help clients reduce their pulling, think
differently about the internal experiences that trigger pulling,
and learn to live a more valued life. The approach blends
traditional behavior therapy approaches of habit reversal training
and stimulus control techniques with a more contemporary ACT-based
approach. This ACT-based approach teaches clients to behave
flexibly and concert with their values whenever they face the
uncomfortable thoughts, feelings, urges, and cravings that often
trigger the pulling. Since its original publication in 2008, AEBT-T
has been studied extensively and shown to be effective in
individual and group format using both face-to-face and telehealth
modalities. Emerging evidence suggests the treatment can also be
successfully applied to older children and adolescents, and this
latest version of the manual describes how the treatment can be
modified for these populations. Fully updated to reflect new
research and organized in an easy-to-use session-by-session format
with accompanying therapy support forms and materials, this
intervention has proven efficacy and will be a valuable resource
and powerful tool for clinicians who commonly treat TTM, OCD and
related disorders.
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Ansiedad Y Perfeccionismo
Clarissa Wong; As told to Michael P. Twohig
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R448
R380
Discovery Miles 3 800
Save R68 (15%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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Trichotillomania (TTM) is a complex disorder that is difficult to
treat, and few effective therapeutic options exist. This client
workbook helps the client through the 10-session, therapist-guided,
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) Enhanced Behavior Therapy
for Trichotillomania (AEBT-T). AEBT-T is designed to help people
with trichotillomania reduce their pulling, think differently about
the internal experiences that trigger their pulling, and learn to
live a more valued life. The approach blends traditional behavior
therapy approaches of habit reversal training and stimulus control
techniques with a more contemporary ACT-based approach. This
ACT-based approach teaches clients to behave flexibly and in
concert with their values whenever they face the uncomfortable
thoughts, feelings, urges, and cravings that often trigger the
pulling. Since its original publication in 2008, the intervention
has been shown to be highly effective, and can also be successfully
applied to older children and adolescents, which is covered in this
new edition. Fully updated to reflect new research and organized in
an easy-to-use session-by-session format with accompanying therapy
support forms and materials, AEBT-T has proven efficacy and will be
a valuable resource and powerful tool for clients who want to learn
to manage their TTM and reduce pulling.
ACT (acceptance and commitment therapy) can be applied to any
psychological disorder that involves struggle with inner
experiences. With over 300 randomized clinical trials supporting
its effectiveness, ACT has seen rapid growth in popularity, and an
increasing number of therapists are being trained in its use. As
such, the demand for practical resources on providing ACT has never
been greater. ACT in Steps is aimed at any therapist who wants to
get familiar with ACT. Chapters walk therapists through a
recommended sequence of ACT sessions, including creative
hopelessness, control as the problem, acceptance, defusion,
mindfulness, values, and committed action, and provide accompanying
materials for clients. The book also provides information on
assessment, case conceptualization, treatment planning, and
intervention that therapists can use as a starting point for
practicing ACT. Exercises and worksheets are included which will
continue to be useful long after readers have achieved mastery of
ACT. Designed to serve as a more structured framework from which
therapists can learn and experiment with ACT concepts, ACT in Steps
is suitable for anyone interested in applying ACT across a range of
presentations, from graduate students seeing their first clients to
clinicians with years of experience interested in learning about
ACT for the first time.
Trichotillomania (TTM) is a complex disorder that is difficult to
treat as few effective therapeutic options exist. Behaviour therapy
has the greatest empirical support, but the number of mental health
providers familiar with TTM and its treatment is quite small. This
manual was written as a tool for therapists to become familiar with
an effective treatment for TTM. The treatment approach described in
this guide blends traditional behaviour with therapy elements of
habit reversal training and stimulus control techniques with the
more contemporary behavioural elements of Acceptance and Commitment
Therapy (ACT). In the first phase of the program, clients are
taught skills for stopping and preventing their unconscious pulling
episodes. In the second phase, clients are introduced to ACT.
Unlike traditional interventions that aim to change type or
frequency of pulling-related cognitions in the hopes of reducing
urges to pull hair, this innovative program uses strategies to
change the function of these cognitions. Clients are taught to see
urges for what they really are and to accept their pulling-related
throughts, feelings, and urges wihtout fighting against them. This
is accomplished through discussions about the function of language
and defusion exercises that show the client how to respond to
thoughts about pulling less literally. Over the course of 10 weeks,
clients learn to be aware of their pulling and warning signals, use
self-management strategies for stopping and preventing pulling,
stop fighting against their pulling-related urges and thoughts, and
work towards increasing their quality of life. Self-monitoring and
homework assignments keep clients motivated and engaged throughout.
Designed to be used with older adolescents and adults, this
innovative intervention has proven efficacy and is sure to be a
powerful tool for the clinician who treats TTM.
There are now over 900 randomized controlled trials demonstrating
the positive effects of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) for
a wide range of areas. ACT is listed as an empirically supported
therapy for multiple clinical concerns and is being disseminated as
an evidence-based treatment by organizations including the United
States Veterans Health Administration and the World Health
Organization. In The Oxford Handbook of Acceptance and Commitment
Therapy, Michael P. Twohig, Michael E. Levin, and Julie M. Petersen
bring together contributions from the world's leading scholars to
create a comprehensive volume on established areas of ACT. The
Handbook presents a scholarly review of the treatment as it has
developed over the past two to three decades. Featuring 33 chapters
on key aspects of the treatment, the contributors offer analysis on
ACT's conceptual and theoretical underpinnings, applications to
specific populations and problems, methods of implementation, and
other special topics. They further cover theory, empirical support,
and scholarly descriptions of treatment application. The volume is
divided into four sections, with the first, on conceptual
foundations, offering five chapters that comprise a primer on ACT.
The second section presents chapters on ACT methods, such as
acceptance, cognitive defusion, and values. The third section
covers specific applications of ACT, including depression, eating
disorders, and psychosis. The fourth and final section covers
issues implementing ACT such as training, delivery in schools,
technology, and cultural adaptation. The Handbook concludes with
two chapters examining directions for future research and practice.
Offering rich resources to further study each topic, the Handbook
is an essential resource for scholars and students who wish to
understand the important major aspects of this transdiagnostic form
of cognitive behavior therapy.
Trichotillomania (TTM) is a complex disorder which involves at
least two levels of psychological functioning. At one level, it is
a habitual behaviour. This type of TTM involves 'automatic pulling'
and typically occurs without a person's awareness. The second type
of TTM is more closely related to emotional functioning or
regulation and is known as 'focused pulling'. Generally, it is
believed that most individuals with TTM exhibit both types of
pulling. THe most common treatment for TTM is Habit Reversal
Therapy (HRT), and its main focus is the habitual, or 'automatic'
aspect of the disorder. In this new treatment program, Drs Wood and
Twohig have designed a treatment which combines the basic aspects
of HRT with Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) to address the
'focused' aspects of the pulling. ACT seeks to alter the thoughts
and feelings surrounding the pulling, and removes the compulsive
aspect of the pulling urge, while HRT focuses on increasing the
awareness of the pulling and teaches the person to utilise a
competing behaviour instead of pulling. Together, these two
techniques work to decrease all incidents of pulling, and help the
client understand and come to terms with the emotional triggers of
their disorder. In a clinical setting, this combined treatment was
proven very effective, with high maintenance rates over a
three-month period. This treatment consists of 10 60-minute
sessions spread out over six weeks, with the final two sessions
taking place every two weeks to ease the client out of the
therapeutic environment and intrduce relapse prevention techniques.
This corresponding workbook will contain monitoring forms to help
the client maintain an awareness of their pulling, as well as
self-assessment tests and other homework exercises.
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