Now in its fifth edition, Mastery of Your Anxiety and Panic, Therapist Guide provides practitioners with the tools necessary to deliver effective treatment for panic disorder and agoraphobia. Reflecting the most up-to-date research on etiology and treatment, as well as cutting-edge scientific
information on inhibitory learning, this guide provides step-by-step instructions for teaching clients the skills to overcome their fear of panic and panic attacks, as well as techniques for addressing atypical and problematic responses. The program is organized by skill, enabling therapists to
tailor treatment to individual clients, and case vignettes illustrate how panic disorder presents differently in clients-and how therapists can respond accordingly. The book also includes a chapter on adapting the treatment for effective delivery in 6 sessions within primary care and related
settings. Written in accessible language aimed at facilitating comprehension and easy implementation, and complete with worksheets and activities to support learning, this Therapist Guide is a gold-standard one-of-a-kind resource that has been recommended for use by public health services around the
world.
Recenzijas
Clear, concise, and user-friendly, the 5th edition of the Therapist Guide is now infused with the recently developed inhibitory learning approaches to enable therapists to maximize effectiveness of the exposure procedures in the Workbook. I strongly urge all therapists using the Workbook to follow this new Guide. * Ricks Warren, PhD, ABPP, Clinical Professor, Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan Medical School * The authors have updated this classic text with new research, an enhanced emphasis on inhibitory learning, and new and improved case material.This new edition pays more attention to variability in how fast or slow a client is able move through the treatment, improving the patient-treatment match.The end result facilitates implementation for the user and is in a way like having a personal supervision experience with the authors. * Peter Roy-Byrne, MD, Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry, University of Washington School of Medicine * These volumes are indisputably the finest evidence-based books for helping people overcome panic disorder. The 5th edition of the therapist guide is especially valuable as it features numerous, brief conversational vignettes featuring both common and atypical problems that Barlow and Craske have encountered during their long clinical careers and guidance on how best to address them. * Richard J. McNally, PhD,Professor of Psychology and Director of Clinical Training,Harvard University *
PART I: BASICS
Chapter 1: Introductory Information for Therapists
Chapter 2: The Nature of Panic Disorder and Agoraphobia
Chapter 3: Outline of Treatment Procedures and Basic Principles Underlying Treatment
Chapter 4: Introduction to the Program
Chapter 5: Learning to Record Panic and Anxiety
Chapter 6: Negative Cycles of Panic and Agoraphobia
Chapter 7: Panic Attacks Are Not Harmful
PART II: COPING SKILLS
Chapter 8: Establishing a Hierarchy of Agoraphobia Situations
Chapter 9: Breathing Skills
Chapter 10: Thinking Skills
PART III: EXPOSURE TO FEARED SYMPTOMS AND SITUATIONS
Chapter 11: Facing Physical Symptoms
Chapter 12: Facing Agoraphobia Situations
Chapter 13: Involving Others
PART IV: PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE
Chapter 14: Medications
Chapter 15: Accomplishments, Maintenance, and Relapse Prevention
Chapter 16: Therapist Guide for Brief Six-Session Version for Primary Care and Related Settings MAP Workbook
Appendix: Assessments for Panic Disorder
Michelle G. Craske, PhD is Distinguished Professor of Psychology, Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, Miller Family Endowed Term Chair, Director of the Anxiety and Depression Research Center, and Associate Director of the Staglin Family Music Center for Behavioral and Brain Health, at UCLA. She has published extensively in the area of fear, anxiety and depression and has been the recipient of extramural funding since 1993 for research pertaining to cognitive, behavioral, psychophysiological and neural risk factors for anxiety and depression that have informed novel treatments; innovative approaches to optimizing therapies such as virtual reality; and implementing scalable treatment models to underserved populations.
David H. Barlow is Professor of Psychology and Psychiatry, Emeritus and the Founder of the Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders at Boston University. He has published over 650 articles and chapters and over 90 books and clinical manuals. He is the recipient of
numerous awards, including honorary degrees from the University of Vermont and William James College, and the two highest awards in psychology, the Distinguished Scientific Award for Applications of Psychology from the American Psychological Association and James McKeen Cattell Fellow Award from the Association for Psychological Science honoring individuals for their lifetime of significant intellectual achievements in applied psychological research.