For the newly trained Cognitive Behavioural Therapist, there are a wealth of challenges and difficulties faced, as they try and apply their new found skills in the outside world. These might include the stresses of working in isolation, and finding it difficult to widen their scope or bounce ideas of other CBT therapists; or the need for practical advice on setting up group therapy; the possible conflicts betweens ethical practice and theory; how to retain ones
integrity as a therapist, while maintaing a viable business practice; dealing with diverse communities, or becoming a supervisor. The Oxford Guide to Surviving CBT Practice is the
one-stop resource for the newly trained therapist. It offers practical guidance on a range of issues and challenges faced by the therapist. Written by people with vast experience of training and practising CBT, it draws on real life situations to help the reader hone and develop their skills, adjust to life as a therapist, and maintain a successful and satisfying career whilst helping others.With thousands of new CBT therapists being trained over the coming years, this
book will be a constant companion for all those starting life as a therapist, one they will want to have to hand at all times.
For the newly trained Cognitive Behavioural Therapist, there are a wealth of challenges and difficulties faced, as they try and apply their new found skills in the outside world. These might include the stresses of working in isolation, and finding it difficult to widen their scope or bounce ideas of other CBT therapists; or the need for practical advice on setting up group therapy; the possible conflicts betweens ethical practice and theory; how to retain ones
integrity as a therapist, while maintaing a viable business practice; dealing with diverse communities, or becoming a supervisor. The Oxford Guide to Surviving CBT Practice is the
one-stop resource for the newly trained therapist. It offers practical guidance on a range of issues and challenges faced by the therapist. Written by people with vast experience of training and practising CBT, it draws on real life situations to help the reader hone and develop their skills, adjust to life as a therapist, and maintain a successful and satisfying career whilst helping others.With thousands of new CBT therapists being trained over the coming years, this
book will be a constant companion for all those starting life as a therapist, one they will want to have to hand at all times.
1: David Westbrook, Martina Mueller, Helen Kennerley, and Freda
McManus: Common problems in therapy
2: Farooq Naeem, Peter Phiri, Shanaya Rathod, and David Kingdon:
Using CBT with diverse patients: Working with South Asian
Muslim
3: Helen Kennerley, Martin Mueller, and Melanie Fennell: Looking
after yourself
4: Tony Hope: Ethics
5: Martina Mueller: Patient perspectives on receiving CBT written
by patients
6: Dave Richards: Low-intensity CBT
7: Louise Hankinson and Rebecca Mitchell: Brief CBT in GP surgeries
and community settings
8: Joanne Ryder: CBT in groups
9: Claudia Koch, Anne Stewart, and Alisa Stuart: Systemic aspects
of CBT
10: Harriet Montgomery, Alison Croft, and Ann Hackmann: Doing CBT
through others
11: Alison Croft and Helen Close: Working in multidisciplinary
teams
12: Patsy Holly, Nicky Boughton and Jill Roberts: CBT with
inpatients in mental health settings
13: Diana Sanders, Christiana Surawy, Daniel Zahl and Heather Salt:
Physical health settings
14: Joan Kirk: Going at it alone
15: Freda McManus, Kate Rosen, and Helen Jenkins: Developing and
progressing as a CBT therapist
16: Helen Kennerley and Sue Clohessy: Becoming a supervisor
17: Melanie Fennell: Training skills
18: David Westbrook: Research and evaluation
19: June Dent: Service development
20: Diana Sanders and James Bennet-Levy: When therapists have
problems: What can CBT do for us?
...these 20 chapters came as a godsend, providing usable strategies
across a swathe of possible demanding scenarios...I am already
planting the seeds of ideas gleaned from just short of 500 pages to
ensure that I am a better CBT therapist than I might have been.
*Healthcare Counselling and Psychotherapy Journal*
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