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Providing step-by-step guidelines to relapse prevention with adult male child sex abusers, this guide is based on the author's experience of piloting a unique cognitive-behavioural treatment approach in community-based, secure hospital and prison sex offender programmes. Hilary Eldridge presents the theoretical base for relapse prevention, and includes information on: the relapse process and its implications for assessment of perpetrator patterns; intervention in those patterns and maintenance of change; rationale for the exercises used in each phase; how to introduce the exercises; how to deal with client questions and resistance; and different ways of explaining the materials. The author also provides sample therapist//client dialogue.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Foreword - D Richard Laws
PART ONE: USING `MAINTAINING CHANGE¿
A Therapist Guide with Accompanying Manual for Perpetrators
PART TWO: THE CHANGE PROCESS
Increasing the Emphasis on Maintenance as the Offender Progresses through Therapy
Monitoring the Offender¿s Progress
PART THREE: THE PHASES OF CHANGE LINKED TO THE EXERCISES IN `MAINTAINING CHANGE: A PERSONAL RELAPSE PREVENTION MANUAL¿
Phase 1
From the Beginning to the Midpoint of Therapy
Motivating Offenders
Working with Blocks to Receptivity
Working with Multidimensional Cycles of Sex Offending
Building Networks - Hilary Eldridge and Jenny Still
Phase 1
Phase 2
From the Midpoint of Therapy Onward
Personal Relapse Prevention Manual Phase 2, Section A
The Cycle and Routes to Relapse
Personal Relapse Prevention Manual Phase 2, Section B
Preventing and Dealing with Risky Moods
Personal Relapse Prevention Manual Phase 2, Section C
The Relapse Prevention Collection
Building Effective Networks
Phase 2
Phase 3
After Formal Therapy
Post-Intervention Monitoring and Callback
Continued Use of Phases 1 and 2 of the Manual
Working with a Network
CONCLUSION: A BROADER PERSPECTIVE ON RELAPSE PREVENTION
Zusammenfassung
Providing step-by-step guidelines to relapse prevention with adult male child sex abusers, this guide is based on the author's experience of piloting a unique cognitive-behavioural treatment approach in community-based, secure hospital and prison sex offender programmes. Hilary Eldridge presents the theoretical base for relapse prevention, and includes information on: the relapse process and its implications for assessment of perpetrator patterns; intervention in those patterns and maintenance of change; rationale for the exercises used in each phase; how to introduce the exercises; how to deal with client questions and resistance; and different ways of explaining the materials. The author also provides sample therapist//client dialogue. >