Philip J Flores, Jeffrey Roth, Barney Straus
Group Psychotherapy with Addicted Populations
An Integration of Theory and Practice
Philip J Flores, Jeffrey Roth, Barney Straus
Group Psychotherapy with Addicted Populations
An Integration of Theory and Practice
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This newly updated and streamlined edition of Group Psychotherapy with Addicted Populations provides proven strategies for combating alcohol and drug addiction through group psychotherapy.
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This newly updated and streamlined edition of Group Psychotherapy with Addicted Populations provides proven strategies for combating alcohol and drug addiction through group psychotherapy.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- 4th edition
- Seitenzahl: 262
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Juni 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 549g
- ISBN-13: 9781032504810
- ISBN-10: 1032504811
- Artikelnr.: 67516236
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- 4th edition
- Seitenzahl: 262
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. Juni 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 549g
- ISBN-13: 9781032504810
- ISBN-10: 1032504811
- Artikelnr.: 67516236
Philip J. Flores, PhD, AGPA-F, is a clinical psychologist and group psychotherapist who has worked extensively with addictive diseases and the author of Group Psychotherapy with Addicted Populations and Addiction as an Attachment Disorder. Jeffrey D. Roth, MD, AGPA-F, DFASAM, FAKRI, DLFAPA, is an addiction psychiatrist and group psychotherapist and the author of Group Psychotherapy and Recovery from Addiction: Carrying the Message. Barney Straus, LCSW, AGPA-F, is an adventure-based therapist and group psychotherapist in private practice and the author of Healing in Action: Adventure-Based Counseling with Therapy Groups.
Part I: Theoretical Models 1. Addiction as an Attachment Disorder 2.
Addiction is a Family Disease: An Attachment Theory Perspective 3. The
Family is the Original Group: Group Relations and Addiction 4. Addiction is
the Attempt to Maintain the Original Family: Trauma and its Re-enactment in
Group Psychotherapy 5. Mutual Support is the Key to Constructing a
Recovering Family: Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions 6. Addiction to
Theory is the Group Psychotherapist's Most Serious Resistance: Exposing the
Blind Men and the Elephant Part II: Nuts and Bolts 7. Conception and Birth:
Preparing a Group Member 8. Holding the Infant: The Opening Phase of Group
Psychotherapy 9. Separation and Individuation: Rupture and Repair 10. Play
and Adventure: Enabling Peer Support 11. Termination: Letting Go and
Letting God 12. Preparation of the Group Psychotherapist
Addiction is a Family Disease: An Attachment Theory Perspective 3. The
Family is the Original Group: Group Relations and Addiction 4. Addiction is
the Attempt to Maintain the Original Family: Trauma and its Re-enactment in
Group Psychotherapy 5. Mutual Support is the Key to Constructing a
Recovering Family: Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions 6. Addiction to
Theory is the Group Psychotherapist's Most Serious Resistance: Exposing the
Blind Men and the Elephant Part II: Nuts and Bolts 7. Conception and Birth:
Preparing a Group Member 8. Holding the Infant: The Opening Phase of Group
Psychotherapy 9. Separation and Individuation: Rupture and Repair 10. Play
and Adventure: Enabling Peer Support 11. Termination: Letting Go and
Letting God 12. Preparation of the Group Psychotherapist
Part I: Theoretical Models 1. Addiction as an Attachment Disorder 2.
Addiction is a Family Disease: An Attachment Theory Perspective 3. The
Family is the Original Group: Group Relations and Addiction 4. Addiction is
the Attempt to Maintain the Original Family: Trauma and its Re-enactment in
Group Psychotherapy 5. Mutual Support is the Key to Constructing a
Recovering Family: Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions 6. Addiction to
Theory is the Group Psychotherapist's Most Serious Resistance: Exposing the
Blind Men and the Elephant Part II: Nuts and Bolts 7. Conception and Birth:
Preparing a Group Member 8. Holding the Infant: The Opening Phase of Group
Psychotherapy 9. Separation and Individuation: Rupture and Repair 10. Play
and Adventure: Enabling Peer Support 11. Termination: Letting Go and
Letting God 12. Preparation of the Group Psychotherapist
Addiction is a Family Disease: An Attachment Theory Perspective 3. The
Family is the Original Group: Group Relations and Addiction 4. Addiction is
the Attempt to Maintain the Original Family: Trauma and its Re-enactment in
Group Psychotherapy 5. Mutual Support is the Key to Constructing a
Recovering Family: Twelve Steps and Twelve Traditions 6. Addiction to
Theory is the Group Psychotherapist's Most Serious Resistance: Exposing the
Blind Men and the Elephant Part II: Nuts and Bolts 7. Conception and Birth:
Preparing a Group Member 8. Holding the Infant: The Opening Phase of Group
Psychotherapy 9. Separation and Individuation: Rupture and Repair 10. Play
and Adventure: Enabling Peer Support 11. Termination: Letting Go and
Letting God 12. Preparation of the Group Psychotherapist