What's the Good of Counselling & Psychotherapy?: The Benefits ExplainedColin Feltham SAGE, 2002 M12 26 - 285 páginas `What this brilliant book does so well is to produce not just the evidence for the research effectiveness of therapies but makes the moral case for bringing together human psychological welfare needs and the expanding number of skilled, ethically sensitive people ready to listen to and respond in the most deeply human and needed way - the counsellors and all who work as psychological therapists. I strongly recommend this book' - Graham Curtis Jenkins, Counselling in Practice |
Contenido
Janis Abernathy Mick Power | 8 |
Proven Benefits of Psychotherapeutic Interventions with | 23 |
Benefits of Therapy with Adults Who Were Abused | 34 |
Suicide Reduction and Prevention | 48 |
Causes and Cures | 81 |
Therapeutic Benefits for People with Borderline | 97 |
Enhancing Personal Effectiveness | 113 |
Visionary Deep Personal Growth | 131 |
Chapter 11 | 179 |
Good Money after Bad? The Justification for | 196 |
Chapter 14 | 209 |
The Benefits of Counselling and Employee Assistance | 211 |
Psychotherapy the Psychology of Trauma and Army | 225 |
Chapter 15 | 240 |
Digby Tantam 2002 | 256 |
279 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
What′s the Good of Counselling & Psychotherapy?: The Benefits Explained Colin Feltham Vista previa limitada - 2002 |
What's the Good of Counselling & Psychotherapy?: The Benefits Explained Hy Mariampolski Vista de fragmentos - 2002 |
What's the Good of Counselling & Psychotherapy?: The Benefits Explained Colin Feltham Sin vista previa disponible - 2002 |
Términos y frases comunes
abused as children adolescents adults abused anxiety approach assessment Attachment theory behaviour benefits borderline personality disorder child citizenship client Clinical Psychology clinicians cognitive Cognitive Analytic Therapy Cognitive Therapy Consulting and Clinical counselling and psychotherapy counselling service counsellors couple depression diagnosed drug emotional intelligence employees evaluation experience factors feelings Firestone Fonagy Health Services human potential movement important individual internal interpersonal intervention interview involved issues Journal of Consulting London mental disorders mental health mental health problems NSPCC obsessive-compulsive disorder organisation outcome parents patients personality disorder practice practitioner prevalence prevention Primal Integration programmes psychiatric psychoanalysis psychodynamic psychological therapy psychotherapy research randomised recognised relationship reported responsibility risk role self-destructive sessions sexual Shneidman social specific spirituality stress studies suicidal ideation suicide symptoms theory therapeutic therapist thought tion treatment understanding University Press well-being whilst World Health Organization York