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Clinical Psychology invites students to think like clinical
psychologists and develop an integrated sense of how science,
experience, ethical behavior, and intuition get woven into our
professional identity. Built around typical psychologists and the
problems they need to solve, it demonstrates that assessment is
much more than testing, and explores how treatment rationales are
tailored to the individual problems, histories, and environments of
clients. Committed to training future professionals, this text
navigates students through the career path of a clinical
psychologist and provides guidance on evolving education and
training models. The text uniquely portrays clinical psychology as
a modern health care profession that bridges physical and mental
health and takes a holistic stance. It treats therapy as a dynamic
process that benefits from the cross-fertilization of a range of
different approaches. It also provides an international
perspective, describing similarities and differences between how
clinical psychology is practiced in different countries and
contexts. It recognizes that clinical psychology changes as health
care systems change, and stresses that training models and practice
patterns need to match these changes. This second edition has been
fully revised and reflects DSM-5 and ICD-10-CM guidelines. New and
enhanced features include: Additional description of the continuing
integration of therapy approaches Additional evidence on how to
make psychotherapy cost-effective Upgrades on self-help and
web-based treatment An expanded chapter on psychopharmacology,
offering more information on mechanisms Expanded in-text pedagogy,
offering more vignettes, ongoing considerations, key terms, and
thinking questions Powerpoint slides and links to recommended
resources.
Clinical Psychology invites students to think like clinical
psychologists and develop an integrated sense of how science,
experience, ethical behavior, and intuition get woven into our
professional identity. Built around typical psychologists and the
problems they need to solve, it demonstrates that assessment is
much more than testing, and explores how treatment rationales are
tailored to the individual problems, histories, and environments of
clients. Committed to training future professionals, this text
navigates students through the career path of a clinical
psychologist and provides guidance on evolving education and
training models. The text uniquely portrays clinical psychology as
a modern health care profession that bridges physical and mental
health and takes a holistic stance. It treats therapy as a dynamic
process that benefits from the cross-fertilization of a range of
different approaches. It also provides an international
perspective, describing similarities and differences between how
clinical psychology is practiced in different countries and
contexts. It recognizes that clinical psychology changes as health
care systems change, and stresses that training models and practice
patterns need to match these changes. This second edition has been
fully revised and reflects DSM-5 and ICD-10-CM guidelines. New and
enhanced features include: Additional description of the continuing
integration of therapy approaches Additional evidence on how to
make psychotherapy cost-effective Upgrades on self-help and
web-based treatment An expanded chapter on psychopharmacology,
offering more information on mechanisms Expanded in-text pedagogy,
offering more vignettes, ongoing considerations, key terms, and
thinking questions Powerpoint slides and links to recommended
resources.
Praise for Stress Management "The author is correct in saying that
the stress management field is a 'soft' one, lacking a strong
theoretical foundation, and therefore lacking good studies of
efficacy and long term outcome. Certainly any publication that
would improve on this situation is to be welcomed. . . . Strengths
are the systematic approach to the topic. The attempt to ground
scientifically the issue of stress management will appeal greatly
to the more discerning student of clinical psychology and applied
health psychology. It will provide a sufficiently academic approach
to the topic that it will find acceptance in courses on the topic."
-William R. Lovallo, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center
& Director, Behavioral Sciences Laboratory, VA Medical Centers,
Oklahoma City Most of the literature on stress management describes
and evaluates individual stress responses but lacks a critical view
of the scientific foundation of stress. In order to truly
comprehend stress management, there needs to be clear understanding
on the phenomenon that is "to be managed." Stress Management: From
Basic Science to Better Practice examines documented pathways
between stress and health and develops the scientific foundations
for sound interventions. The book begins with a broad review of the
term 'stress' and its importance for health. The text then provides
a critical examination of the elements of the stress process,
extracts supporting research for a rationale of stress management
and describes various stress management techniques and their
effectiveness. In Stress Management, author and renowned stress
researcher Wolfgang Linden reviews the literature on intervention
outcomes, noting weaknesses that include an overemphasis on
individual rather than societal responsibility for stress and
coping and disregard of the emerging field of positive psychology.
The author concludes the text with a proposed distinction between
psychotherapy and stress management, and he proposes the need for
three distinguishable subtypes of stress management programs-a
systematic-preventative approach; a broad-based stress vaccination
and prevention type of protocol; and a reactive, problem-solving
type of stress reduction intervention. Key Features Begins with a
firm groundwork in defining stress and examining conceptual models
of stress to set the stage for rational, science-based thinking on
how to manage it Introduces a unique three-step process model for
stress management Considers physiological and sociocultural
influences on stress and health Offers an objective analysis of
existing literature and includes extensive personal, clinical
experiences of the author to make the science of stress come alive
for the reader Includes coverage of positive psychology and how the
creation of social support and positive emotional states can ease
experiences with stress Stress Management is an excellent textbook
for advanced undergraduate and graduate courses, such as Stress
Management, Stress & Coping, Stress & Health, and Stress
& Wellness, in the fields of Psychology and Health. The book is
also a valuable resource for researchers and clinicians within the
behavioral sciences interested in understanding and alleviating
stress.
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