Fr. 66.00

Brief Supportive Psychotherapy - A Treatment Manual and Clinical Approach

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

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Many therapists conduct supportive therapy, but that can mean all kinds of things. Brief Supportive Psychotherapy: A Treatment Manual and Clinical Approach describes Brief Supportive Psychotherapy (BSP), the first and only research-defined and proven therapy for depression and anxiety disorders. This book guides therapists in helping patients pay attention to, tolerate, and manage their often painful inner emotional life rather than having to avoid it. Research has shown that this helps most people feel much better. It's a relatively simple and powerful intervention for mood and anxiety problems.

List of contents










  • Chapter 1 Introduction

  • Chapter 2 What is Supportive Psychotherapy?

  • Chapter 3 Common Factors

  • Chapter 4 Affect Focus

  • Chapter 5 Formulation: Developing an Emotional Conceptualization of the Patient

  • Chapter 6 The Structure of BSP

  • Chapter 7 Supportive Evidence: Research on a Treatment that Works

  • Chapter 8 Adjusting BSP to Different Disorders

  • Chapter 9 Case Examples

  • Chapter 10 BSP Training and Supervision


  • References

  • Index

  • Acknowledgments




About the author

John C. Markowitz received his medical degree from Columbia in 1982 and completed psychiatric residency training at the New York Hospital-Payne Whitney Clinic in 1986. He trained in cognitive behavioral therapy at the Center for Cognitive Therapy in Philadelphia and in interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) with the late Gerald L. Klerman, M.D. at Cornell. He has spent decades conducting psychotherapy research, studying treatment of mood, anxiety, personality, and trauma-related disorders. He developed Brief Supportive Psychotherapy (BSP), of which this book is the manual. Dr. Markowitz is Professor of Clinical Psychiatry at Columbia University and Research Psychiatrist at New York State Psychiatric Institute.

Summary

Supportive psychotherapy is widely practiced but poorly defined, often misunderstood, and unfairly disparaged. Dr. Markowitz and his colleagues manualized Brief Supportive Psychotherapy (BSP) as a time-limited control treatment to compare to "more active" established psychotherapies like cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) in research studies. In fact, BSP, an emotion-focused, bare-bones treatment based on Carl Rogers' Client Centered Therapy, has since proven itself to be a robust treatment in multiple randomized controlled treatment trials. It has generally kept pace with the brand name treatments in treating patients with difficult disorders like chronic depression. Some therapists, previously trained only in cognitive and behavioral approaches, have found this affect-focused approach adds a new dimension to their thinking and to patients' lives.

Brief Supportive Psychotherapy: A Treatment Manual and Clinical Approach is both an elaboration of the now well-tested research treatment manual for BSP and a primer for clinicians. It illustrates how BSP helps patients with mood and anxiety disorders to tolerate rather than avoid their powerful negative emotions. It describes the key elements of supportive psychotherapy, covering the crucial "common factors" that help make all evidence-based psychotherapies effective. These include affective arousal, helping the patient to feel understood, realistic optimism for improvement, a therapeutic ritual, clinical poise, and success experiences. BSP maximizes patient autonomy, letting the patient lead sessions, and prescribes no homework. It is an elemental, relatively simple approach for a psychotherapy, yet no psychotherapy is easy to do well. Its affect-focused approach enhances the application of all psychotherapeutic approaches. It deserves a place among evidence-based treatments in depression treatment guidelines.

Additional text

Brief Supportive Psychotherapy: A Treatment Manual and Clinical Approach, by John C. Markowitz, is outstanding.This brief, powerful book is significant because it offers more than a model of therapeutic practice--its valuable contribution to nurturing connection-driven patient relationships and an understanding of the importance of affectbased therapies cannot be overstated.

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