Getting Started as a Therapist: 50+ Tips for Clinical Effectiveness

Author:   Anthony D. Smith (Private practice, Massachusetts, USA)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781032623467


Pages:   232
Publication Date:   10 October 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Getting Started as a Therapist: 50+ Tips for Clinical Effectiveness


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Overview

Getting Started as a Therapist provides students and new therapists with a bridge between education and practice. Written for a transtheoretical audience, the book explores questions and struggles common to students and new therapist supervisees. Readers can find pointed guidance in 52 chapters, spanning five categories. Categories include: Establishing better therapeutic relationships. What to avoid saying to patients. Increasing diagnostic accuracy, understanding why diagnosis is not a dirty word, and how it is critical to a good outcome. Specialized topics like how to more effectively talk about self‑injury and learning to use metaphors. Professional development such as making the most of supervision and how to limit liability. The succinct chapters come alive with real‑life examples and are often followed by suggestions for further reading and worksheets that help readers to refine their practice.

Full Product Details

Author:   Anthony D. Smith (Private practice, Massachusetts, USA)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
ISBN:  

9781032623467


ISBN 10:   1032623462
Pages:   232
Publication Date:   10 October 2024
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

"Section 1: Setting the Stage 1. It’s Not Like on TV 2. Be Yourself 3. Therapy Isn’t a Race 4. Don’t Forget the Basics 5. Forget About Being So Formal 6. Mastering Your Therapeutic Presence 7. Body Language Basics 8. How to Polish Your Summarizing 9. Find Value in Silence 10. Strive to Cultivate Substance in Each Session 11. Ask About Meaning 12. Be Attentive to Your Intuition 13. Don't Rely on Psychological Archaeology Section 2: Things Therapists Shouldn't Say 14. The Big 3 15. Beware of the Suck-It-Up Trap 16. What Not to Say to Anxious Patients 17. What Not to Say to Depressed Patients 18. What Not to Say to People Who Hear Voices Section 3: Demystifying Diagnosis 19. Ignore Popular Culture Portrayals of Mental Illness 20. In Defense of Diagnosis (Part 1) 21. In Defense of Diagnosis (Part 2) 22. Post-Diagnosis Considerations 23. Never Diagnose Based on One Chief Symptom 24. Re-Evaluate Historical Diagnoses 25. 5 Quick Tips for More Thorough Assessments 26. Always Consider Medical Mimicry 27. How to Evaluate for Medical Mimicry 28. How to Discuss Diagnoses with Patients Section 4: Special Topics 29. Interview, Don't Interrogate 30. Try Not to be Alarmist 31. Be Familiar with the Defenses 32. Approach Trauma Lightly 33. Learn About Self-Injury 34. Exploring Therapist Self-Disclosure 35. There's No Need to Rescue 36. Why Therapists Must be Salespeople 37. Learn to Reframe 38. Getting Friendly with Metaphors 39. What if Someone Implies, ""You'd Never Understand""? 40. Pay Attention to the Role of Culture 41. Talk About Medications 42. Personality Disorders are Important 43. Ask for Feedback Section 5: Professional Development 44. Consider an Integrative Approach 45. Limiting Liability 46. Clinical Supervision if Vital for Therapist Growth 47. Take Continuing Education Seriously 48. Have Clinical Heroes 49. Improve Your Clinical Skills After Hours 50. Do Therapists Need Therapy? 51. Protecting Your Own Mental Health 52. You Can't Save Them All"

Reviews

“This is a very user-friendly book that’s sure to become a guiding light for students and new therapists who want to stand out from the start! Highly recommended.” Bill O’Hanlon, Oprah-featured author of 41+ books, including in Search of Solutions and Do One Thing Different “In a wise and thoughtful manner, Anthony Smith has crafted a remarkable book of effective strategies for conducting psychotherapy and growing professionally. Beginners and seasoned professionals alike will benefit from his perspective on best therapeutic practices.” Richard P. Halgin, PhD, ABPP, professor emeritus of psychology, UMass Amherst, and textbook author “This book is so comprehensive and well-written. I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it to seasoned mental health practitioners and graduate-level instructors for their use with students who have an eye on clinical practice.” Joseph W. Shannon, PhD, teacher, consultant, and psychotherapist in private practice in Columbus, Ohio “In the style of a metaphor-making storyteller with the clear-thinking, staccato delivery of someone with decades of experience, Anthony Smith has crafted a delightfully provoking and informative resource for new therapists and supervisors alike.” Emma E. Redfern, MA, psychotherapist, supervisor, author, workshop presenter, and podcast co-host


"""This is a very user-friendly book that’s sure to become a guiding light for students and new therapists who want to stand out from the start! Highly recommended."" Bill O’Hanlon, Oprah-featured author of 41+ books, including In Search of Solutions and Do One Thing Different ""In a wise and thoughtful manner, Anthony Smith has crafted a remarkable book of effective strategies for conducting psychotherapy and growing professionally. Beginners and seasoned professionals alike will benefit from his perspective on best therapeutic practices."" Richard P. Halgin, PhD, ABPP, professor emeritus of psychology, UMass Amherst, and textbook author ""This book is so comprehensive and well-written. I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it to seasoned mental health practitioners and graduate-level instructors for their use with students who have an eye on clinical practice."" Joseph W. Shannon, PhD, teacher, consultant, and psychotherapist in private practice in Columbus, Ohio ""In the style of a metaphor-making storyteller with the clear-thinking, staccato delivery of someone with decades of experience, Anthony Smith has crafted a delightfully provoking and informative resource for new therapists and supervisors alike."" Emma E. Redfern, MA, psychotherapist, supervisor, author, workshop presenter, and podcast co-host"


"""This is a very user-friendly book that’s sure to become a guiding light for students and new therapists who want to stand out from the start! Highly recommended."" Bill O’Hanlon, Oprah-featured author of 41+ books, including in Search of Solutions and Do One Thing Different ""In a wise and thoughtful manner, Anthony Smith has crafted a remarkable book of effective strategies for conducting psychotherapy and growing professionally. Beginners and seasoned professionals alike will benefit from his perspective on best therapeutic practices."" Richard P. Halgin, PhD, ABPP, professor emeritus of psychology, UMass Amherst, and textbook author ""This book is so comprehensive and well-written. I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it to seasoned mental health practitioners and graduate-level instructors for their use with students who have an eye on clinical practice."" Joseph W. Shannon, PhD, teacher, consultant, and psychotherapist in private practice in Columbus, Ohio ""In the style of a metaphor-making storyteller with the clear-thinking, staccato delivery of someone with decades of experience, Anthony Smith has crafted a delightfully provoking and informative resource for new therapists and supervisors alike."" Emma E. Redfern, MA, psychotherapist, supervisor, author, workshop presenter, and podcast co-host"


Author Information

"Anthony D. Smith is a licensed mental health counselor, certified juvenile court clinician, professor, clinical supervisor, and trainer with more than 20 years of experience. He maintains ""Up & Running,"" a popular Psychology Today blog for new therapists."

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