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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Cate CampbellPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.560kg ISBN: 9780367898960ISBN 10: 0367898969 Pages: 216 Publication Date: 10 March 2020 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsThis book is an incredibly helpful addition to our knowledge of the practice of psychosexual and relationship therapy. Cate takes us on a journey through a comprehensive history of the profession, the complexity of DSM and the dangers this holds in pathologising clients, to the day to day problems that the client brings to our room. The assessment session is particularly helpful for those starting in the profession, as well as those looking to refresh their knowledge. A warm, empathetic and educational read which I recommend. Jo Coker, Psychologist, Accredited Psychosexual Therapist/Supervisor and COSRT Professional Standards Manager Cate Campbell's new book firmly brings sex therapy practice into the 21st century. Students, sex therapists and experienced practitioners alike will find food for thought, as she encourages the therapist to assume a reflexive stance to their own practice. Cate uses her experience as a practitioner and lecturer to take an overall view of what the therapist needs as a secure base in order to develop their own, highly individual, practice. She addresses many important issues, which a sex therapist cannot afford to ignore, such as consent, trauma, culture, identity and gender, together with chemsex and FGM. Each chapter has a useful list of references, giving the therapist a starting point to undergo their own research. As a tutor and practitioner I would recommend this book not only to psychosexual therapists but to all practitioners in the counselling and psychotherapy field. Michele Logue, Foundation for Counselling and Relationships Studies, University Centre Doncaster I can't imagine what Masters and Johnson would have made of the very modern chemsex phenomenon, but I doubt they could have summarised it and put it into sexual therapy contexts as compassionately as Cate Campbell has, or with as much cultural competency. The modern convergence of technology with sexual subcultures, drug proliferation and pornography heralds a whole new era in sexual behaviour and therapy, that might leave many sex therapists feeling overwhelmed or out of touch. Cate explains that this needn't be the case, addressing the chemsex subject with a competent and much needed compassion. David Stuart, Social Worker and first to name and identify the chemsex phenomenon This book is an incredibly helpful addition to our knowledge of the practice of psychosexual and relationship therapy. Cate takes us on a journey through a comprehensive history of the profession, the complexity of DSM and the dangers this holds in pathologising clients, to the day to day problems that the client brings to our room. The assessment session is particularly helpful for those starting in the profession, as well as those looking to refresh their knowledge. A warm, empathetic and educational read which I recommend. Jo Coker, Psychologist, Accredited Psychosexual Therapist/Supervisor and COSRT Professional Standards Manager Cate Campbell's new book firmly brings sex therapy practice into the 21st century. Students, sex therapists and experienced practitioners alike will find food for thought, as she encourages the therapist to assume a reflexive stance to their own practice. Cate uses her experience as a practitioner and lecturer to take an overall view of what the therapist needs as a secure base in order to develop their own, highly individual, practice. She addresses many important issues, which a sex therapist cannot afford to ignore, such as consent, trauma, culture, identity and gender, together with chemsex and FGM. Each chapter has a useful list of references, giving the therapist a starting point to undergo their own research. As a tutor and practitioner I would recommend this book not only to psychosexual therapists but to all practitioners in the counselling and psychotherapy field. Michele Logue, Foundation for Counselling and Relationships Studies, University Centre Doncaster This book is an incredibly helpful addition to our knowledge of the practice of psychosexual and relationship therapy. Cate takes us on a journey through a comprehensive history of the profession, the complexity of DSM and the dangers this holds in pathologising clients, to the day to day problems that the client brings to our room. The assessment session is particularly helpful for those starting in the profession, as well as those looking to refresh their knowledge. A warm, empathetic and educational read which I recommend. Jo Coker, Psychologist, Accredited Psychosexual Therapist/Supervisor and COSRT Professional Standards Manager Cate Campbell's new book firmly brings sex therapy practice into the 21st century. Students, sex therapists and experienced practitioners alike will find food for thought, as she encourages the therapist to assume a reflexive stance to their own practice. Cate uses her experience as a practitioner and lecturer to take an overall view of what the therapist needs as a secure base in order to develop their own, highly individual, practice. She addresses many important issues, which a sex therapist cannot afford to ignore, such as consent, trauma, culture, identity and gender, together with chemsex and FGM. Each chapter has a useful list of references, giving the therapist a starting point to undergo their own research. As a tutor and practitioner I would recommend this book not only to psychosexual therapists but to all practitioners in the counselling and psychotherapy field. Michele Logue, Foundation for Counselling and Relationships Studies, University Centre Doncaster I can't imagine what Masters and Johnson would have made of the very modern chemsex phenomenon, but I doubt they could have summarized it and put it into sexual therapy contexts as compassionately as Cate Campbell has, or with as much cultural competency. The modern convergence of technology with sexual subcultures, drug proliferation and pornography heralds a whole new era in sexual behaviour and therapy, that might leave many sex therapists feeling overwhelmed or out of touch. Cate explains that this needn't be the case, addressing the chemsex subject with a competent and much needed compassion. David Stuart, Social Worker and first to name and identify the chemsex phenomenon Author InformationCate Campbell is a relationship and psychosexual therapist and lecturer with the Foundation for Counselling & Relationship Studies, and provides training for a number of organisations including Relate and the College of Sexual & Relationship Therapists. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |