Cognitive therapies are based on the idea that behavior and emotions result largely from an individual's appraisal of a situation, and are therefore influenced by that individual's beliefs, assumptions and images. This book is a comprehensive guide to cognitive therapy of anxiety disorders.
For fuller descriptions of treatment, see Morrison and Westbrook (2004); Salkovskis, Forrester, Richards, and Morrison (1999); Simos (2002); and Wells (1997). Common Complicating Factors There is extensive overlap between health anxiety ...
Cognitive-Behavior Therapy has been demonstrated to be the most effective form of treatment for social phobia. This volume addresses the psychopathology and heterogeneity of social phobia, creating interventions with case examples.
Bloch, M.H., Landeros-Weisenberger, A., Dombrowski, P. et al. (2007) Systematic review: Pharmacological and behavioral treatment for trichotillomania. Biological Psychiatry, 62, 839-846. Blom, R.M., Koeter, M., van der Brink, W. et al.
Cognitive-behavioral therapy is highly effective in the treatment of anxiety disorders, regardless of the specific type of fear that is causing difficulties.
In a large-size format for easy photocopying, the book includes a detailed case formulation framework, a flexible treatment planning algorithm, and over 90 pages of user-friendly reproducibles.
Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment for Generalized Anxiety Disorder: From Science to Practice provides a review of the empirical support for the different models of GAD.
Cognitive psychologist Gary Emery then details the therapeutic principles, strategies, and tactics developed on the basis of the cognitive model of anxiety disorders and phobias.This fifteenth anniversary edition of the foundational work on ...
Written and edited by an international team of leading experts in the field, this is a key text for researchers, practitioners, students and clinical trainees with interests in child and adolescent anxiety.
The founder of cognitive therapy and two colleagues apply the concepts of cognitive therapy, used successfully in treating depression, to the treatment of anxiety disorders and phobias.
In fact, their psychological problems led to 7 fewer weeks of work per year, a loss of 20% in potential income, and a lifetime loss for each family that had a depressed family member of $300,000 (Smith & Smith, 2010).