Flooding and Implosive Therapy Direct Therapeutic Exposure in Clinical Practice için kapak resmi
Flooding and Implosive Therapy Direct Therapeutic Exposure in Clinical Practice
Başlık:
Flooding and Implosive Therapy Direct Therapeutic Exposure in Clinical Practice
ISBN:
9781468443707
Edition:
1st ed. 1983.
Yayın Bilgileri:
New York, NY : Springer US : Imprint: Springer, 1983.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
XII, 236 p. online resource.
Contents:
1 Direct Therapeutic Exposure -- What Is Direct Therapeutic Exposure? -- For Which Disorders Is Direct Therapeutic Exposure Effective? -- Early False Assumptions Lead to Concerns about Effectiveness -- Concerns about Resensitization and/or the Incubation Effect -- Does Direct Therapeutic Exposure Harm Clients? -- 2 Research on Nonpatient Populations -- Animal Analogue Research -- Human Analogue Research -- Summary -- 3 Research on Patient Populations -- Issues in the Treatment of Anxiety Disorders with Therapeutic Exposure -- Exposure Techniques Used with Other Disorders -- Summary -- Case Reports -- 4 Theory and Technique -- Implosive Therapy: Theory and Technique -- The Flooding Technique -- 5 Case Examples -- Chronic Posttraumatic Stress Disorder -- Simple (Specific) Phobia -- Agoraphobia -- Panic Disorders -- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders -- Epilogue -- References -- Author Index.
Abstract:
Behavior therapists often "desensitize" clients by exposing them to an anxiety-eliciting stimulus such as a phobic object. The premise is that repeated exposures will eventually reduce or extinguish the fear. This process is called therapeutic exposure. Many therapists would agree that therapeutic exposure is an effective treatment for several anxiety disorders. However, the "directness" with which therapeutic exposure should be encouraged for a client is much debated. Many feel that direct therapeutic exposure, more commonly known as flooding or implosive therapy, causes clients an excessive amount of anxiety, and may therefore produce long-lasting and harmful side effects. In response to these concerns, one well-known behavior therapy technique, systematic desensitization, was designed to expose clients to imagined fear stimuli slowly and under relaxing conditions so as not to elicit anxiety. In the first chapter of this book, we show that these concerns are based on false assumptions. When used properly, direct therapeutic exposure is not harmful. In Chapters 2 and 3, we review the literature on the process and outcome of flooding and implosive therapy from a practical, clinical perspective. This literature shows that these treatments are effective and efficient for certain psychiatric disorders. In Chapter 4, we describe the treatments we offer our clients and show how learning theory can be used to help develop the procedure and content of therapy. Chapter 5 provides case examples with transcripts of typical therapy sessions. This book can be used as a handbook for therapists or students.
Subject Term:
Added Author:
Dil:
English