
Dealing with Family and Interpersonal Problems
Dennis C. Daley and Antoine Douaihy
in Managing Your Substance Use Disorder: Client Workbook (3 edn)
Problems and conflicts in family and interpersonal relationships are common in recovery and can contribute to relapse if clients don’t have a plan to deal with them. Conflict, tension, and ...
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Managing Conflicts between Ethics and Law
W. Brad Johnson
in Military Psychologists' Desk Reference
Military psychologists occasionally find themselves struggling to reconcile differences between their ethical obligations, as codified in the APA Ethics Code (APA, 2010) and their legal ...
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Parenting Support in the Workplace
Divna M. Haslam and Nicole Penman
in The Power of Positive Parenting: Transforming the Lives of Children, Parents, and Communities Using the Triple P System
Demographic changes over the last 40 years means the majority of parents are now employed in some capacity. This chapter outlines some of the challenges parents face in balancing competing ...
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Treating High-Conflict Couples
Susan Heitler
in Psychologists' Desk Reference (3 ed.)
Chapter 77 explores processes for treating high-conflict couples, including the setup for treatment, diagnosis and treatment, and providing suggestions to improve the probability of ...
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Co-Parenting
Annette Rotter
in Handbook of Private Practice: Keys to Success for Mental Health Practitioners
Co-parenting therapy is a niche practice area that focuses on providing parents with tools to diminish conflict and develop their co-parenting skills before, during, and after divorce. ...
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Mary Main, Erik Hesse, and the Berkeley Social Development Study
Robbie Duschinsky
in Cornerstones of Attachment Research
This chapter explores the contributions of Mary Main, Erik Hesse, and the Berkeley longitudinal study. The Berkeley group generated the dominant approach to method and theory for the second ...
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Conflict, Personality, and Culture in Psychotherapy
Richard G. Druss
in Listening to Patients: Relearning the Art of Healing in Psychotherapy
Chapter 4 explores conflict, personality, and culture in psychotherapy. Listening to patients from different ethnic and cultural backgrounds can be a challenge for any therapist. Helping a ...
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Session 9: Keys to Maintaining Progress
Bryan D. Carter, William G. Kronenberger, and Eric L. Scott
in Children's Health and Illness Recovery Program (CHIRP): Teen and Family Workbook
Session 9 involves a review with you and your parent(s) of the individual skills you have acquired in Children’s Health and Illness Recovery Program (CHIRP) and providing guidance aimed at ...
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Session 9: Keys to Maintaining Progress
Bryan D. Carter, William G. Kronenberger, Eric L. Scott, and Christine E. Brady
in Children's Health and Illness Recovery Program (CHIRP): Clinician Guide
Session 9 provides a review of the individual skills the teen has acquired in the Children’s Health and Illness Recovery Program (CHIRP) with a focus on relapse prevention strategies and ...
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The Contribution of Psycho-Analysis to Midwifery
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 5, 1955-1959
In this essay, Winnicott discusses the psychoanalytic contribution to relationships between the doctor, the nurse, the midwife, and the patient, with reference to childbirth and the ...
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Paediatrics and Childhood Neurosis
Donald W. Winnicott
in The Collected Works of D. W. Winnicott: Volume 5, 1955-1959
In this essay, Winnicott discusses his view of neurosis as unconscious conflict, as anxiety arising from the violent conflicts between unconscious fantasy and the child’s inner reality. ...
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Session 9: Dealing With Internal Issues and Conflicts
Joel M. Reiter, Donna Andrews, Charlotte Reiter, and W. Curt LaFrance Jr.
in Taking Control of Your Seizures: Workbook
Internal conflicts refer to the inner stresses within each individual—the feelings, conflicts, and issues that are part of a person’s inner being, which affect overall health and well-being ...
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Helping Families Manage Childhood OCD: Decreasing Conflict and Increasing Positive Interaction, Therapist Guide
Tara S. Peris and John Piacentini
Childhood obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) is a complex condition that is often accompanied by high levels of family stress and strain. Families of youth with OCD face a unique set of ...
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Session 9: Dealing With Internal Issues and Conflicts
W. Curt LaFrance Jr. and Jeffrey Peter Wincze
in Treating Nonepileptic Seizures: Therapist Guide
In this chapter the seizure counselor assists the patient in effectively dealing with internal issues by identifying conflicts, negative feelings, and issues, and then learning to take care ...
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Making Good Referrals
Steven Walfish and Jeffrey Zimmerman
in Psychologists' Desk Reference (3 ed.)
Chapter 124 explores the process of making good referrals, the types of professionals to have within your referral network, how to avoid conflict of interest, when to refer to other mental ...
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Issues in Developing and Joining a Group Practice
Edward A. Wise
in Handbook of Private Practice: Keys to Success for Mental Health Practitioners
When a mental health practitioner joins or forms a group practice, an infinite number of complex issues must be addressed. These include an array of personal, professional, and business ...
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Ethnographic Approaches
Urmitapa Dutta
in Handbook of Methodological Approaches to Community-Based Research: Qualitative, Quantitative, and Mixed Methods
Critical ethnography is an approach that connects detailed cultural analysis to wider social structures and systems of power by simultaneously examining dimensions of race, class, culture, ...
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Learning to cope with conflict and violence: how schools can help youth
Susan Opotow and Morton Deutsch
in Learning to Cope: Developing as a Person in Complex Societies
This chapter focuses on the complex conflicts that young people face in their lives, particularly the kinds of conflicts that schools post for youth. It identifies ways that schools can ...
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Specialized Child and Family Interventions
Jay Lebow
in Evidence-Informed Interventions for Court-Involved Families: Promoting Healthy Coping and Development
This chapter reviews strategies that are relevant to intervention with families involved in high conflict divorce. At the center of this approach is a steady patient approach based in ...
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Parenting Coordination: Structures and Possibilities
Barbara J. Fidler and Lyn R. Greenberg
in Evidence-Informed Interventions for Court-Involved Families: Promoting Healthy Coping and Development
Parenting coordination is a dispute resolution process generally occurring after a parenting plan has been established, to assist parents in chronic high conflict coparenting. Mental health ...
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