Featuring a host of authoritative international contributors, this comprehensive and timely handbook is aimed at general psychiatrists, clinical psychologists, psychology and psychiatric trainees, and other professions using psychotherapy as part of their clinical practice. It guides readers through the latest evidence on a range of therapies, pointing to evidence for and against effectiveness, and also goes a stage further with guidelines on further reading and training. Although there are several related books in existence, this one is unique in that it will offer both an overview of the key evidence--based therapies and a summary of the evidence base for them.
Featuring a host of authoritative international contributors, this comprehensive and timely handbook is aimed at general psychiatrists, clinical psychologists, psychology and psychiatric trainees, and other professions using psychotherapy as part of their clinical practice. It guides readers through the latest evidence on a range of therapies, pointing to evidence for and against effectiveness, and also goes a stage further with guidelines on further reading and training. Although there are several related books in existence, this one is unique in that it will offer both an overview of the key evidence--based therapies and a summary of the evidence base for them.
About the Editors.
List of Contributors.
Preface.
Part I: Overview of Therapies.
Chapter 1 Introduction (Mick Power and Chris Freeman).
Chapter 2 Cognitive Therapy (Willem Kuyken and Aaron T. Beck).
Chapter 3 Interpersonal Psychotherapy and Depression (Kathryn L. Bleiberg and John C. Markowitz).
Chapter 4 Behaviour Therapy (P.M.G. Emmelkamp, E. Vedel and J.H. Kamphuis).
Chapter 5 Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT) (Sharon Y. Manning).
Chapter 6 Eye-movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing(EMDR) (John Spector).
Chapter 7 The Effectiveness of Counselling (John McLeod).
Chapter 8 Constructivist and Humanistic Therapies (David Winter).
Part II: Psychological Treatment of Disorder and Specific Client Groups.
Chapter 9 Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (Katharine Logan).
Chapter 10 Eating Disorders (Jane Morris).
Chapter 11 Personality Disorders (Katherine Cheshire).
Chapter 12 Intellectual Disabilities (William R. Lindsay and Peter Sturmey).
Chapter 13 Forensic Problems and Anger (Mark Ramm).
Chapter 14 Psychological Therapy for Depression and Anxiety in Older Adults (Ken Laidlaw).
Chapter 15 Alcohol Problems (Nick Heather).
Chapter 16 Bereavement (Fiona Cathcart).
Chapter 17 Evidence-based Psychological Interventions in Psychosis (N. Sanjay Kumar Rao and Douglas Turkington).
Chapter 18 Bipolar Disorders (Jan Scott).
Chapter 19 Depression (Roslyn Law).
Chapter 20 Specific Phobias (Stan Lindsay).
Chapter 21 Social Anxiety Disorder (Winnie Eng and Richard G. Heimberg ).
Chapter 22 Children and Adolescents (Alan Carr).
Chapter 23 Generalised Anxiety Disorder (Rob Durham and Peter Fisher).
Chapter 24 Adjuvant Psychological Therapy for Patients with Chronic Physical Illness (Tom Brown and Siobhan MacHale).
Part III: Conclusions.
Chapter 25 Practice-based Evidence as a Complement to Evidence-based Practice (Michael Barkham and Frank Margison).
Author Index.
Subject Index.
Chris Freeman is a consultant psychiatrist and psychotherapist based at the Cullen Centre in the royal Edinburgh Hospital and is also a senior lecturer in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Edinburgh. he established the South of Scotland Training Programme in Cognitive Behaviour Therapy and has published widely in the areas of eating disorders and psychological therapies.
Mick Power is Professor of Clinical Psychology at the University of Edinburgh and an honorary consultant clinical psychologist at the royal Edinburgh Hospital. he is the co-founder of the journal Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy and has previously edited handbooks of mood disorders and of cognition and emotion. His main interest is in the application of theories of cognition and emotion to the understanding of psychological disorders.
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