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According to a 2012 National Institutes of Health survey, 18
million adults in the United States-8% of the adult
population-practice some type of meditation. What are the possible
applications of meditation-and mindfulness in particular-in
psychotherapy and psychiatry? Becoming Mindful: Integrating
Mindfulness Into Your Psychiatric Practice tackles this issue in a
down-to-earth manner designed for immediate applicability. Whereas
most other books on the topic focus on the benefits of mindfulness
either for the clinician or for the patient, Becoming Mindful
offers chapters on both, providing advice on how clinicians can
establish a personal mindfulness practice and encourage their
patients to do the same, both during sessions and at home. For
clinician and patient alike, the handbook discusses the practical
aspects of mindfulness, from the most effective postures to
specific practices, and offers solutions for overcoming common
obstacles, including restlessness and boredom, sleepiness, and
sensory craving. Several chapters feature embedded exercises and
guided meditations, and an appendix with audio guided meditations
and a resource list provides psychiatrists, psychologists,
psychiatric residents, social workers, counselors, and nurse
practitioners, among others, with readily accessible tools to use
in sessions with patients. Key takeaways summarize each chapter's
content, making it easy for busy clinicians to quickly reference
the information they need to most effectively treat patients, even
those in special populations, including children and adolescents;
patients battling substance addiction; and patients suffering from
such disorders as depression, anxiety, posttraumatic stress
disorder, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. With
additional sections on mindful eating, mindfulness and technology,
and the growing field of positive psychiatry, this book introduces
readers to the full scope of benefits that mindfulness has to
offer.
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