Personality Styles and Brief Psychotherapy

Personality Styles and Brief Psychotherapy
Author: Mardi Jon Horowitz
Publisher:
Total Pages: 374
Release: 2001
Genre: Psychology
ISBN:

Written for therapists working with people in distress, this book describes the links between crisis and personality style, and offers a plan for approaching cases with these connections in mind. The authors discuss ways to help patients learn new coping strategies, modify enduring attitudes, and improve their relational patterns. The chapters outline the history of brief dynamic psychotherapy, describe an approach focused on current stressors, apply configurational analysis to case formulation and review, and detail five personality types.

Personality Styles and Brief Psychotherapy

Personality Styles and Brief Psychotherapy
Author: Mardi Jon Horowitz
Publisher: Jason Aronson
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1997
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9781568218700

TABLE OF CONTENTS: 1. The History of Brief Dynamic Psychotherapy 2. Our Approach to Brief Therapy: Focused on Current Stressors 3. Configurational Analysis: An Approach to Case Formulation and Review 4. The Hysterical Personality 5. The More Disturbed Hysterical Personality 6. The Compulsive Personality 7. The Narcissistic Personality 8. The Borderline Personality 9. Change in Brief Psychotherapy.

Personality and Psychotherapy

Personality and Psychotherapy
Author: Jefferson A. Singer
Publisher: Guilford Press
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2005-08-25
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1593852118

"Showing how and why contemporary personality science matters in the clinical context, this book offers eminently practical tools for psychotherapists from any disciplinary background, and will also be of interest to personality and social psychologists. It is an ideal text for advanced undergraduate courses and for graduate seminars taught within clinical training programs."--BOOK JACKET.

The Complex Secret of Brief Psychotherapy

The Complex Secret of Brief Psychotherapy
Author: James Paul Gustafson
Publisher: Jason Aronson
Total Pages: 476
Release: 1997
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9780765700636

In this useful and timely book, Gustafson shows how the therapist can borrow from the entire tradition of psychotherapy for productive short-term treatment. He explains how to conserve the virtues of earlier stances; describes how to handle the opening, middle, and ending phases in brief therapy; and clarifies the difficulties in short-term work, particularly the tendency of therapist to leave themselves out of the equation. Gustafson's 'method of methods' described here provides psychotherapist with an effective way of engaging patients in brief, successful work.

Adult Personality Growth in Psychotherapy

Adult Personality Growth in Psychotherapy
Author: Mardi J. Horowitz
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 151
Release: 2016-05-03
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 1107532965

Describes a clinician-patient relationship for the achievement of a wider range of safe emotional expression and mastery of previous traumas.

Handbook of the Brief Psychotherapies

Handbook of the Brief Psychotherapies
Author: Richard A. Wells
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 611
Release: 2013-11-22
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 1489921273

The last two decades have seen unprecedented increases in health care costs and, at the same time, encouraging progress in psychotherapy research. On the one hand, accountability, cost-effectiveness, and efficiency have now become commonplace terms for providers of mental health services whereas, on the other hand, an increasingly voluminous literature has emerged supporting the effectiveness of a number of types of psychotherapies. There now exists the possibility for the design and delivery of mental health services that-drawing upon this literature-more closely approximate empirically established data concerning the appropriateness and effectiveness of psychotherapy. The Handbook of the Brief Psychotherapies is intended to capture one major thrust of this movement: the development of a group of empirically grounded, time-limited therapies all sharing a common interest in the clinical utilization of a structured focus and an emphasis on time and action. For many years, professional self-interest, competing theoretical para digms, and the vagaries of practice, wisdom, and clinical myth have influenced the practice of psychotherapy. A critical questioning of the resulting, predomi nantly nondirective, open-ended, and global therapies has led to a growing emphasis on action-oriented, problem-focused, time-limited therapies. Yet, ironically, this interest in the brief psychotherapies has not so much involved a radical departure from traditional therapeutic modalities as it has emphasized a new pragmatism about how time, action, and structure operate in life as well as in therapy.