Corey, G. (2009). Theory and practice of counselling and psychotherapy. (8th Ed.). Belmont, CA: Thomson Brooks/ Cole.…
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy is a common type of mental health counseling that with the help of the therapist allows the client to become aware of inaccurate or negative thinking and enables the client to view challenging situations more clearly and respond to them in a more effective way. This therapeutic approach is not distinct, but is a culmination of various cognitive and behavioral therapeutic techniques. The team will examine the aspects of CBT covering the description, history and research of this technique. The team will also provide information that will explain the appropriate uses of this practice, why it is necessary, and the patients that benefit from this behavioral changing technique. There are issues and concerns involved with CBT that will also be addressed.…
Corey, G. (2013). Theory and practice of counseling and psychotherapy. (9 ed.). Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole CENGAGAE Learning.…
An ocular disease that affects the middle layer of the eye is Glaucoma. It damages the optic nerve fibers, when each fiber is damaged it creates a bigger damage, malfunction to no function of the optic nerve. Ultimately, once the entire optic nerve is damaged peripheral blindness results. High intraocular pressure is in great part what contributes to the damage caused by Glaucoma. Although high intraocular pressures indicate Glaucoma, thick corneas can also make the pressures seem high. Resting in our eye there is liquid, properly known as aqueous fluid, overproduction or poor drainage of it causes the optic nerve damage, many months of uncontrolled eye pressure can easily go unnoticed, this disease has no symptoms until it is too late. There…
References: Andrews, L. W. (2010). Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy. In Encyclopedia of Depression (Vol. 1, pp. 112-113). Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood Press. Retrieved July 23, 2014, from http://go.galegroup.com.ezproxy.liberty.edu:2048/ps/i.do?action=interpret&id=GALE%7CCX1762700076&v=2.1&u=vic_liberty&it=r&p=GVRL&sw=w&authCount=1…
Originally Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT) was created by Dr. Albert Ellis in 1955 and later developed by many other therapist. The basic and original thought behind CBT was that problems were not caused by situations alone, but how we, as individuals, interpret these situations, which cause out emotional responses and actions (BBC, 2014). This thinking when it started was considered so different and untrue. The thought in the 1950s when this theory was created was that each persons emotions came from themselves, not because of the situations in that environment. Personally, was my grandfather was still around, he always told me that no matter how hard something becomes, a persons character defines their emotions, he was a firm believer that a persons behavior was a product of themselves, because this is how god made everyone. This had never made sense to me, and so I shrugged whenever i heard this…
The demands of modern life can overwork the eyes and cause vision problems for the person wearing prescription glasses. However, this is a glass half-empty outlook. There are also useful vision hacks and lens options available for Nike prescription glasses owners. These can help you when you're in a tight fix or enhance your vision in ways you might never have considered. Below are six examples of these:…
as a single treatment approach while others chose to blend things from two or more…
My personal approach to counseling is on the collaborative relationship. The counselor assists the client in identifying dysfunctional beliefs. The counselor also discovers alternative rules for living for the client. The therapist acts as the teacher and teaches new abilities and skills to the client. This is where the A-B-C model acts as acrucial ingredient in the implementation of cognitive reasoning within the client. “The therapist promotes corrective experiences that lead to learning new skills” (An Integrative Perspective. Pg. 468.). The client understands their problem better and practice changing self-defeating ways, such as, acting and thinking. In this way, it is important to maintain a truthful, secure,…
The methods of practice differ in each situation, but they are similar in preparation. Practitioners must first make an evaluation or assessment of their client. This process take’s patience and practitioners must be able to listen actively to their client with no distractions and without any preconceived notions of what the speaker is saying (Martin, 2007, p. 47). After a practitioner makes a clinical assessment, they can decide on what intervention strategy to use with a client. The Task-Centered Approach is an example of one intervention strategy that a counselor may use. This strategy helps clients who think they are powerless over simple challenges caused by psychosocial problems and allows counselors help define these challenges and set small, agreed upon goals with clients to help them increase self-esteem (Martin, 2007, p. 55). Reframing is another intervention strategy. This strategy helps clients look at the different perspectives of a situation instead of only the negative. Sometimes people hesitate to act on a situation because of the viewpoint that it will always result in a negative outcome. An opposite approach to this strategy would be emotional regulation. Some people do not…
Westbrook, D., Kennerley. H. & Kirk, J. (2011) An Introduction to Cognitive Behaviour Therapy: Skills and Application, 2nd ed. London: Sage Publications Ltd.…
Job Duties: An ophthalmologist can be responsible for all eye care procedures, including vision screening, eye exams, eye surgeries, and diagnosis and treatment of diseases relating to the visual process.…
Today’s psychology is assembled with a huge variety of techniques, therapies, and approaches based on different models and theories of development and human behavior. When it comes to counseling, it is great to have the proper knowledge of various tools, so that a counselor’s professional behavior allows him or her to be flexible and to apply different techniques based on the individual’s problems and situational needs of every client who is seen. With there being a variety of different techniques, there are two counseling theories that are different, and their effectiveness comes from opposite sides of counseling, but they are very similar in the same way. These approaches are known as the Client-Centered Approach and the Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. It is important that good therapists are properly equipped with both concepts and are readily aware on how both of these concepts are used so they can help the client in the best possible way needed.…
My client currently receives cognitive behavioral therapy, however, how we can we assist her to change the way that she thinks, when her each day of her life is filled with a negative encounter? Cognitive behavioral therapy alone is not enough, this client and other clients like her need for trauma sensitive information, and family issues to be addressed. If the family does not know how to express themselves, or have never grieved or coped with recent losses or instances, then TF-CBT would be able to assist with building and utilizing appropriate coping skills, and with learning about how to grieve appropriately. This type of therapy aims to teach the children and families how to deal with their problems appropriately and to get them to accept…
As a counselor in training, most of my exposure as an intern has been with adolescents and children. While I have learned various theoretical approaches in my higher education and during my internship, I have found myself utilizing a Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) with this type of population. According to Sperry & Sperry (2012), “CBT is a here-and-now approach that is problem-focused, and also seeks to modify or correct maladaptive cognitions and behaviors using a variety of cognitive and behavioral methods to change rigid thinking, mood and behavior” (p. 111). Not only do the children and adolescents respond to this approach, but they also respond to the therapeutic relationship as well. For the therapeutic relationship is collaborative…