Trauma Treatment Handbook: Cross-Spectrum Protocol
Pass
Robin Shapiro
Awesome book. The author is succinct, informative, and resource-rich, demonstrating an amazing depth of knowledge, mastering a large number of traumatic therapies, and sympathy and enthusiasm for trauma survivors. All of this emphasizes the objectivity of science and a vivid sense of humor.
Shapiro not only provides readers with detailed guidelines for many types of therapies to help traumatized people [from childhood abuse to sexual assault, to car accidents to the horrors of war], but there is a chapter for the therapist, no matter what The story of listening to customers often heartache is traumatic.
The rich selection of therapeutic trauma techniques provides readers with clear evidence of familiarity [eg, psychodynamic theory generated from Freud's thinking] to less common or less common therapies [eg brain epidemics and dialectic] Behavioral therapy].
For those of us who are not bathed in the DSM-IV [Psychiatric Diagnostic and Statistical Manual] holy water, the author lists a number of acronyms that represent a variety of human pain labels, as well as various anti-trauma treatment method. specific. [Shapiro ended this exhausted two-page list, including "WTF:? Response to so many acronyms!"]
The author [already published in two books on this topic] describes the compliant details of EMDR [eye movement and desensitization] and suggests that the better label is "rework therapy" because it consists of BLS [bilateral stimulation] composition. EMDR also "includes elements of mindfulness, somatosensory, exposure and cognitive therapy."
Since the original TFT [Ideology Field Therapy] passed EFT [Emotional Freedom Technology], TAT [Tapas Acupressure Technology] and clinical work, "Energy Psychology" can cure phobia in one treatment. Psychologist David Feinstein "married with energy medical expert Donna Eden." [This shows my ignorance because I have never heard of her].
In the chapter on hypnotherapy, Shapiro cleverly combines the Eriksson language to provide readers with a brief experience of hypnosis. Several hypnotic techniques for dealing with wounds illustrate the power of this approach. [only lack of hypnotic olfactory regulation].
This book is for therapists - novice or experienced - and offers a wide range of options for specific trauma clients. There are also specialized chapters on grief, military and marginal personality disorders. At the end of each chapter and text, there is a rich reference for further study.
Orignal From: Can treat wounds - how is it here?
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