Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) allows people with acquired brain injury to develop psychological flexibility, in order to lead a vital life, despite all the difficult thoughts, feelings and brain injury symptoms that are present.
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) allows people with acquired brain injury to develop psychological flexibility, in order to lead a vital life, despite all the difficult thoughts, feelings and brain injury symptoms that are present.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Richard Coates works as a Consultant Clinical Neuropsychologist in Independent Practice. He co-founded the Neuro-ACT Facebook group, which aims to connect clinicians and researchers worldwide using Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) with people with neurological conditions. Richard is engaged with ACT in many contexts: his work with clients, supervision, training, research, community and himself. Connection, creativity, learning and kindness matter to him.
Inhaltsangabe
CHAPTER ONE ACT resilience training in multiple sclerosis Kenneth I. Pakenham and Ambra Mara Giovannetti CHAPTER TWO "Rather than be in a cage, be in a cocoon": A pilot yoga- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy group for people with Acquired Brain Injury Mairéad Jones, Jenn Galvin and Marcia Ward CHAPTER THREE ACT with older adults after stroke Ana Rita Silva, Paula Castilho and Sérgio A. Carvalho CHAPTER FOUR Relational approaches: ACT with female relatives of people with brain injury Jo Johnson CHAPTER FIVE ACTing through the stroke journey: Acute, inpatient and community rehabilitation from the perspective of a stroke survivor and two psychologists Lucy Martin, Marcia Ward and Fiadhnait O' Keeffe CHAPTER SIX Creative interventions with ACT and severe brain injury Richard Coates CHAPTER SEVEN Informing therapeutic practice after a traumatic brain injury: Values identification and achievement during engagement in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Diane Whiting, Grahame Simpson and Frank Deane CHAPTER EIGHT Life asks you questions: Presence as process in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for adults with aphasia Fiona O'Neill CHAPTER NINE Applying the Relational Frame Theory account of the self to self-related issues following a traumatic brain injury Alison Stapleton, Richard Coates, Fergus Gracey and Louise McHugh CHAPTER TEN Evaluating a novel, online Acceptance and Commitment Therapy intervention for allied healthcare professionals in a neurorehabilitation setting Karen Kinsella, Marcia Ward and Sharon Houghton
CHAPTER ONE ACT resilience training in multiple sclerosis Kenneth I. Pakenham and Ambra Mara Giovannetti CHAPTER TWO "Rather than be in a cage, be in a cocoon": A pilot yoga- Acceptance and Commitment Therapy group for people with Acquired Brain Injury Mairéad Jones, Jenn Galvin and Marcia Ward CHAPTER THREE ACT with older adults after stroke Ana Rita Silva, Paula Castilho and Sérgio A. Carvalho CHAPTER FOUR Relational approaches: ACT with female relatives of people with brain injury Jo Johnson CHAPTER FIVE ACTing through the stroke journey: Acute, inpatient and community rehabilitation from the perspective of a stroke survivor and two psychologists Lucy Martin, Marcia Ward and Fiadhnait O' Keeffe CHAPTER SIX Creative interventions with ACT and severe brain injury Richard Coates CHAPTER SEVEN Informing therapeutic practice after a traumatic brain injury: Values identification and achievement during engagement in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Diane Whiting, Grahame Simpson and Frank Deane CHAPTER EIGHT Life asks you questions: Presence as process in Acceptance and Commitment Therapy for adults with aphasia Fiona O'Neill CHAPTER NINE Applying the Relational Frame Theory account of the self to self-related issues following a traumatic brain injury Alison Stapleton, Richard Coates, Fergus Gracey and Louise McHugh CHAPTER TEN Evaluating a novel, online Acceptance and Commitment Therapy intervention for allied healthcare professionals in a neurorehabilitation setting Karen Kinsella, Marcia Ward and Sharon Houghton
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