"Psychodynamic psychotherapy" Essays and Research Papers

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    All clients are entitled to good standards of practice and care from their practitioners in counselling and psychotherapy. Good standards of practice and care require professional competence; good relationships with clients and colleagues; and commitment to and observance of professional ethics. Good quality of care Good quality of care requires competently delivered services that meet the client’s needs by practitioners who are appropriately supported and accountable. Practitioners should give

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    Case Conceptualization

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    PSY 610 Midterm Exam Prep Chapter 1 1. The comment “In psychology‚ even the rats are white and male” refers to which of the following? a. Experimental psychologists continue to use only white male rats in their research studies. b. Psychotherapy is useful only for white males. c. Most psychological theories were developed by white men of European descent and much of the research historically focused on whites and males. d. All of the above. e. Only b and c. 2. Which of the following

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    THEORY IN PRACTISE CSTL3

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    ESSAY: THEORY IN PRACTICE CST-L3 There are three main theoretical approaches/models used in Counselling: Humanistic/Person centred developed by Carl Rodgers‚ Psychodynamic theories developed by Sigmund Freud and Behavioural therapies such as (T/A) TRANSACTIONAL ANALYSIS founded by Eric Berne and Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT). If any of the above are used effectively in practice‚ a therapist will be able to help an individual achieve positive change in problematic areas presented

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    Cognitive Behavioural Therapy‚ known as CBT is a common form of therapy used by the NHS in the UK. This assignment will describe what CBT is‚ where it came from and the role of the counsellor. 2.0 What is Cognitive Behavioural Therapy? “CBT is a psychotherapy that is based on the cognitive model: the way that individuals perceive a situation is more closely connected to their reaction than the situation itself.” www.beckinstitute.org CBT is a solution orientated collaboration between the Counsellor

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    world‚ other people and how what they do affects their thoughts and feelings. CBT can help to change how a person thinks (‘cognitive’) and what they do (‘behavior’)‚ thus helping them to manage difficulties and feel better about life. Unlike most psychotherapies which only work with talk and reflections‚ CBT regards behavioral acts as primary. Treatment involves clients engaging in personal behavioral experiments‚ ‘practice makes perfect.’ For many behaviorally based problems such as phobias obsessive

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    Macclesfield College ABC Level 3 Certificate in Counselling Skills Assignment 2 Understanding counselling theory. Unit 2- R/601/7575 Hana Lewis- 144383 ABC 17970-33 Contents Page 3 : Introduction. (157 words) Page 3 : Origins of Person- centred counselling (198 words) Page 4: Key concepts and principles of Person- centred counselling. (288 words) Page 5 : How does Person-centred counselling‚ influence the understanding of the development of concept of self? (245 words) Page 6

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    Psychological Therapies For Depression The Psychodynamic Interpersonal Therapy PIT was first developed by Robert Hobson (1985) as an attempt to move away from the traditional psychoanalytic approach of a one-sided relationship between therapist and client. It was originally called the ‘conversational model’ to emphasise the fact that the mutual task of therapist and client was to engage in a therapeutic ‘conversation’. In this ‘conversation’ problems are not only talked about as past events

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    Post- Traumatic Stress Disorder; The origin‚ Causes‚ treatments and miscellaneous information Dennis Frost CJ440-01 Crisis intervention Professor Findley Kaplan University Abstract Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)‚ when did this disorder originate? What are some of the facts that have been found about PTSD? How does this disorder start? What treatments are available to help with this disorder? Many of these questions and more are going to be answered in this report. Millions and millions

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    Existential Psychology

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    Existential Foundations of Looming Vulnerability: Thoughts About John Riskind’s Work with Anxiety In Carlo Strenger’s Journal entry “Existential Foundations of Looming Vulnerability: Thoughts about John Riskind’s Work with Anxiety”‚ in the Journal of Psychotherapy Integration‚ we are presented with the empirical fact that “humans need a certain amount of irrationality to stay afloat.” If humans did not have such irrationality they would never venture to start businesses‚ become financial investors‚ or invest

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    Person-centered Therapy offers the therapist all that he/she will need to treat clients. Introduction Person-centered therapy is just one of over more than 300 different types of psychotherapy treatments available to clients‚ illustrated by Holmes and Lindley (1989) as ranging from Active Analytical Psychotherapy to Zaraleya Psychoenergetic Technique. Over the years‚ these varying schools of thought have not always seen eye to eye with emphasis being placed on differences rather than any commonality

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