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Mindful counselling and psychotherapy : practising mindfully across approaches & issues / Meg Barker.

By: Barker, Meg-John, 1974-Material type: TextTextPublication details: Los Angeles : SAGE, 2013Description: 207 pages : illustrations ; 25 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781446211106; 144621110X; 9781446211113 (pbk.); 1446211118 (pbk.)Subject(s): Psychotherapy -- Religious aspects -- Buddhism | Buddhism -- Psychology | Psychotherapy | Counseling | Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy | Counselor and client | Mindfulness | Buddhism -- psychology | Cognitive Therapy -- methods | Counseling -- methods | Buddhism -- Psychology | Counseling | Counselor and client | Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy | Psychotherapy | Psychotherapy -- Religious aspects -- BuddhismGenre/Form: Case ReportsDDC classification: 616.8914 LOC classification: BQ4570.P76 | B27 2013NLM classification: 2014 B-439 | WM 425.5.C6
Contents:
Mindful theory and practice -- Mindful therapy : the client, the counsellor, the relationship -- Integrating mindful therapy with other approaches -- Researching mindful theraphies -- Depression -- Stress and anxiety -- Addiction -- 'Psychotic' experiences -- The body : plain, sleep, eating, sex -- Relationships -- Concluding thoughts
Summary: This book breaks new ground by relating mindfulness to all of the other therapeutic approaches, across all the common presenting problems in counselling & psychotherapy. Mindfulness is increasingly recognised as an effective therapeutic treatment with positive research outcomes evaluating its success. Meg Barker responds to our growing consciousness of mindfulness approaches, considering how its principles can inform everyday therapeutic work. The book: covers ways in which mindfulness approaches complement each therapeutic approach, as well as any potential conflicts and tensions that might arise; spells out how a mindfulness approach would understand - and work with - common presenting issues, including depression, anxiety and addiction; brings together work on mindfulness from across psychotherapy, science, and philosophy; and suggests possible future directions in mindfulness, particularly those which emphasise the social component of suffering. -- Source other than Library of Congress.
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Item type Current library Home library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Open Books Open Books MCHS LIBRARY--LL Malawi College Of Health
General Stacks
MCHS LIBRARY--LL Malawi College Of Health
General Stacks
Non-fiction WM 425.5 BAR 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available l10657
Open Books Open Books MCHS LIBRARY--LL Malawi College Of Health
General Stacks
MCHS LIBRARY--LL Malawi College Of Health
General Stacks
Non-fiction WM 425.5 BAR 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 2 Available l10481
Open Books Open Books MCHS LIBRARY--LL Malawi College Of Health
General Stacks
MCHS LIBRARY--LL Malawi College Of Health
General Stacks
Non-fiction WM 425.5 BAR 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 3 Available l10395

Includes bibliographical references (pages 189-201) and index.

Mindful theory and practice -- Mindful therapy : the client, the counsellor, the relationship -- Integrating mindful therapy with other approaches -- Researching mindful theraphies -- Depression -- Stress and anxiety -- Addiction -- 'Psychotic' experiences -- The body : plain, sleep, eating, sex -- Relationships -- Concluding thoughts

This book breaks new ground by relating mindfulness to all of the other therapeutic approaches, across all the common presenting problems in counselling & psychotherapy. Mindfulness is increasingly recognised as an effective therapeutic treatment with positive research outcomes evaluating its success. Meg Barker responds to our growing consciousness of mindfulness approaches, considering how its principles can inform everyday therapeutic work. The book: covers ways in which mindfulness approaches complement each therapeutic approach, as well as any potential conflicts and tensions that might arise; spells out how a mindfulness approach would understand - and work with - common presenting issues, including depression, anxiety and addiction; brings together work on mindfulness from across psychotherapy, science, and philosophy; and suggests possible future directions in mindfulness, particularly those which emphasise the social component of suffering. -- Source other than Library of Congress.

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