000 02855cam a2200193Ii 4500
020 _a9783030790387
082 0 4 _b3
100 1 _aWoodcock, Jeremy,
245 1 0 _aFamilies and individuals living with trauma
_ba guide for therapists, relatives, and friends
_cJeremy Woodcock
264 1 _aCham, Switzerland
_bPalgrave Macmillan
_c2022
300 _aXVII,205 PAGES
_bTABLES, ILLUSTRATIONS
490 1 _aPalgrave texts in counselling and psychotherapy
505 0 _a1. Introduction -- 2. Beginnings -- 3. Body, Brain, and Trauma -- 4. Creating a Welcome -- 5. Trauma, Attachment, and Resilience -- 6. When Secure Attachments are Blown Apart -- 7. Trauma, Pain, and Transformation -- 8. Trauma and Death -- 9. Social Systems that Promote Attachment Versus Systems that Create Trauma -- 10. When Disaster Strikes -- 11. Learning to Look After Ourselves -- 12. Mainly Theory
520 _aThis book is an accessible guide for understanding and treating psychological trauma. Drawing on Dr. Woodcocks extensive experience and the latest research, it offers an approach that integrates systemic therapy and psychoanalytic perspectives through the lens of attachment theory. The books chapters cover topics such as trauma and pain; traumatic death; how to respond when disaster strikes; social systems that promote attachment versus systems that create trauma; and how to look after ourselves as therapists, family, and friends of trauma survivors. Because no single therapeutic paradigm is sufficient to capture the complexity of trauma, the book brings together a wide set of therapeutic traditions and shows in detail how to apply a variety of treatment approaches, gathered from psychoanalytic, cognitive behavioral, intersubjective, mindfulness, and body psychotherapy traditions, including Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR). The books vignettes and case studies provide clear illustrations of the theory outlined and demonstrate the use of interventions in a range of settings. It will appeal to qualified and training practitioners in the clinical and care professions and researchers from across the psychological sciences with an interest in trauma, as well as to a more general readership affected by issues relating to trauma. Jeremy Woodcock is in independent practice as a psychotherapist, supervisor, teacher, and writer. He has spent his professional life as a psychotherapist working with survivors of trauma. He was Consultant Family Therapist and Head of Groupwork at Freedom from Torture and Director of Family therapy training at the University of Bristol (UK), and is advisor and consultant to a wide variety of organizations working with trauma and its after effects
650 0 _aTraumatic neuroses
650 0 _aPsychotherapy.
856 4 0 _uhttps://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-3-030-79039-4
942 _2lcc
_cBK
999 _c10190
_d10190