Hardback : $120.00
1. What Is the Case Formulation Approach to Cognitive-Behavior Therapy?
2. Cognitive Theories and Their Clinical Implications
3. Learning Theories and Their Clinical Implications
4. Emotion Theories and Their Clinical Implications
5. Beginning the Therapeutic Relationship and Obtaining a Problem List and Diagnosis
6. Developing an Initial Case Formulation and Setting Treatment Goals
7. Using the Formulation to Develop a Treatment Plan and Obtain the Patient¿s Consent to It
8. The Therapeutic Relationship
9. Monitoring Progress
10. Decision Making in the Therapy Session
11. Handling Nonadherence and Treatment Failure
12. Decision Making over the Course of Therapy
1. What Is the Case Formulation Approach to Cognitive-Behavior Therapy?
2. Cognitive Theories and Their Clinical Implications
3. Learning Theories and Their Clinical Implications
4. Emotion Theories and Their Clinical Implications
5. Beginning the Therapeutic Relationship and Obtaining a Problem List and Diagnosis
6. Developing an Initial Case Formulation and Setting Treatment Goals
7. Using the Formulation to Develop a Treatment Plan and Obtain the Patient¿s Consent to It
8. The Therapeutic Relationship
9. Monitoring Progress
10. Decision Making in the Therapy Session
11. Handling Nonadherence and Treatment Failure
12. Decision Making over the Course of Therapy
1. What Is the Case Formulation Approach to Cognitive-Behavior
Therapy?
2. Cognitive Theories and Their Clinical Implications
3. Learning Theories and Their Clinical Implications
4. Emotion Theories and Their Clinical Implications
5. Beginning the Therapeutic Relationship and Obtaining a Problem
List and Diagnosis
6. Developing an Initial Case Formulation and Setting Treatment
Goals
7. Using the Formulation to Develop a Treatment Plan and Obtain the
Patient’s Consent to It
8. The Therapeutic Relationship
9. Monitoring Progress
10. Decision Making in the Therapy Session
11. Handling Nonadherence and Treatment Failure
12. Decision Making over the Course of Therapy
Jacqueline B. Persons, PhD, is Director of the Oakland Cognitive Behavior Therapy Center and Clinical Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of California, Berkeley. She is a clinician, teacher, researcher, writer, and scientist-practitioner. She maintains an active clinical practice, providing cognitive-behavior therapy for mood and anxiety disorders and related problems, and teaches and provides clinical supervision to students and professionals in many settings. Dr. Persons conducts research on the mechanisms underpinning symptoms of depression and anxiety and on the process and outcome of cognitive-behavior therapy, especially as it is implemented in routine clinical practice. Her first book, Cognitive Therapy in Practice: A Case Formulation Approach, published by W. W. Norton in 1989, is widely considered a classic. She is past president of the Association for Advancement of Behavior Therapy (now the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies) and of the Society for a Science of Clinical Psychology, a section of the Society of Clinical Psychology of the American Psychological Association.
"Persons's insights into case formulation are second to none. This
book brilliantly demonstrates that you don't have to sacrifice good
science to be an excellent clinician, and vice versa. I recommend
it to psychotherapists and students at all levels of experience who
are interested in using the best theories and clinical techniques
to help their patients achieve real and lasting change. Persons's
rare combination of clinical practicality and scientific dedication
makes her a role model for every young
scientist-clinician."--Marsha M. Linehan, PhD, ABPP, Professor and
Director Emeritus, Behavioral Research and Therapy Clinics,
University of Washington; developer of DBT "This groundbreaking
volume will train the next generation of cognitive-behavioral
therapists. Its sophisticated blending of case-level formulation
with empirical principles of behavior change is a threshold event
in CBT's ongoing engagement with clinical complexity, comorbidity,
and nonadherence."--Zindel Segal, PhD, Distinguished Professor of
Psychology in Mood Disorders, University of Toronto–Scarborough,
Canada
"Decades of research and clinical experience meet in this seminal
book. Persons provides a guide for both the novice and experienced
practitioner to deal with even the most complex of cases. This
significant work will no doubt become the shining light by which
the idiographic approach to CBT will be guided in the future. One
of the few books that is worth even more than the purchase
price!"--Nicholas Tarrier, PhD, FBPsS, Department of Psychology,
Institute of Psychiatry, King's College, London, UK "There is no
greater challenge facing mental health professionals than moving
from scientific theory and research to clinical practice. Persons
has addressed this critical issue for many years, and has come up
with solutions that demand the attention of serious health
professionals. She convincingly shows how to analyze complex cases
in ways that are both scientifically sound and practically feasible
and effective. Persons is the consummate scientist-practitioner.
This book is a 'must read' for students, academics, and
practitioners."--Gerald C. Davison, PhD, William and Sylvia Kugel
Dean's Chair, and Professor of Gerontology and Psychology,
University of Southern California - This excellent book describes
treatment formulation and the therapeutic process well, from a
cognitive-behavioral framework. The reproducible forms are
extremely helpful, especially for new therapists who are beginning
a private practice. All-in-all, the author helps us to look at the
therapeutic process in cognitive-behavioral terms and design it
with each specific client in mind, and not in terms of a general
protocol. This is very refreshing, to say the least....4 stars!
--Doody's Review Service, 10/24/2012
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