THE BIG SALE IS ON! TELL ME MORE

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

$288.95

Hardback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
Oxford University Press
21 March 2024
The Oxford Handbook of Cognitive Analytic Therapy presents a comprehensive guide to the cognitive analytic therapy (CAT) model. It balances established theory and practice alongside a focus on innovation in both direct work with clients and the application of CAT more broadly within teams, organizations, and training, and as a model for leadership. The volume includes a range of innovations in 'doing' and 'using' CAT, which are directly applicable for those studying and working in health, social care, and private services, across many specialties encompassing the entire lifespan. This includes child and adolescent services; working age through to older adults; individuals engaged with mental health services and within forensic and prison populations; and those experiencing physical health and neurological difficulties, both in community and inpatient settings. Given the social and dialogic origins of CAT, the book acknowledges the importance of the wider social, cultural, and political factors that can shape an individual's understanding of self and other, with chapters that both apply a CAT understanding to key issues such as racism and social context, and provide a critique to the extent in which CAT engages with these issues in practice. This volume also has a focus on professional standards and governance (encompassing training, supervision, and a competency framework), and throughout the book the editors have endeavoured to include clients' voices, including personal reflections, extracts from actual CATs, and co-produced chapters, to ensure the book holds true to the collaborative nature of CAT.

By:   , , , , , , ,
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 253mm,  Width: 182mm,  Spine: 54mm
Weight:   1.976kg
ISBN:   9780198866572
ISBN 10:   0198866577
Series:   Oxford Library of Psychology
Pages:   976
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
SECTION ONE: INTRODUCTION 1: Laura Brummer, Marisol Cavieres, and Ranil Tan: Overview to the Oxford Handbook of Cognitive Analytic Therapy 2: Ian B. Kerr and Hilary Beard: The evolving CAT model and its current core features SECTION TWO: CAT THEORY AND MODEL DEVELOPMENT 3: Eva Burns-Lundgren: Theoretical underpinnings of CAT 4: Jason Hepple: The 'D' in CAT 5: Mark Westacott: The development of the multiple self states model SECTION THREE: CAT PRACTICE 6: Deborah Tee: The structure of therapy 7: Alison Jenaway: Reformulation: Creating a shared understanding in CAT 8: Elizabeth Wilde McCormick: Recognition: The development of a compassionate observing eye 9: Julie Lloyd: Revision: Understanding how change is achieved 10: Deborah Pickvance: Endings in CAT SECTION FOUR: UNDERSTANDING PEOPLE IN THEIR SOCIAL, CULTURAL AND POLITICAL CONTEXT 11: Rhona Brown: CAT in social context 12: Jessie Emilion: Othering and otherness in CAT: Exploring race, racism, and racial dialogues within a relational framework 13: Anne Benson and Josephine F. Discepolo Ahmadi: Gender, sexuality, and CAT SECTION FIVE: DEVELOPMENTS IN CAT THEORY, RESEARCH, AND PRACTICE 14: Dawn Bennett, Glenys Parry, and Liz Fawkes: Working with enactments in CAT 15: Steve Potter: Mapping and writing as a co-creative therapeutic process 16: Stephen Kellett, Alex D. Young, Jason Hepple, and Stephen White: Eight session CAT: The evidence and the approach 17: Laura Brummer and Cheryl Delisser: Group CAT 18: Glenys Parry: Do no harm: Balancing risk and safety in CAT 19: Peter James Taylor, Olympia Gianfrancesco, and Samantha Hartley: Evaluating CAT: Research practice and future direction 20: Mikael Leiman: Semiotic object relations theory (SORT) as the basic CAT theory? SECTION SIX: APPLICATIONS OF CAT 21: Sarah Douglass: CAT in the perinatal period 22: Nick Barnes: A cognitive analytic approach for working alongside young people 23: Louise K. McCutcheon, Jessica O'Connell, and Andrew M. Chanen: Helping young people early: A model of early intervention for people living with a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder 24: Julia Coleby, Sarah Haycock, Jill Finnigan, Hannah Roberts, and Caroline Wyatt: Getting the balance right: CAT for eating distress 25: Claire Wilson: Using CAT to understand and work with complex trauma: Asylum seeker and refugee populations 26: Ranil Tan, Alex Perry, and Olympia Gianfrancesco: CAT and psychosis: Working with unusual experiences and extreme states 27: Mark Evans: CAT for people with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder 28: Natalie Bork and Jo Varela: CAT and intellectual disability: Working with individuals and systems 29: Marisol Cavieres and Ranil Tan: CAT within adult mental health inpatient settings 30: Mark Ramm and Karen Shannon: CAT within forensic settings part one: An overview 31: Kerry Manson, Sue Ryan, and Peter Lock: CAT in forensic settings part two: Clinical applications 32: Karen Addy: Clinical neuropsychology: The use of the multiple self states model to understand behaviour following traumatic brain injury 33: Nadine Bearman and Alison Jenaway: A relational approach to working with medically unexplained symptoms (or not yet explained symptoms) 34: Andrew R. Thompson and John R. Fox: CAT for long term health conditions 35: Susie Black and Jason Davies: CAT in a cancer setting: Working with people with cancer, carers, and staff 36: Michelle Hamill, Ellen Khan, and Paul Catlin: Attending to later life: A CAT approach to working with the legacy of complex trauma SECTION SEVEN: CAT WITHIN AND ACROSS SYSTEMS 37: Angela Carradice and Andrea Daykin: Five session CAT care planning approach 38: Sarah Craven-Staines and Jayne Finch: CAT consultancy for enhancing team functioning 39: Sue Walsh and Kate Freshwater: 'Struggling well': Using CAT to make sense of organisational hurt 40: David Harvey: CAT-informed leadership: Navigating the emotional and relational pressures of the workplace SECTION EIGHT: INCORPORATING OTHER THERAPEUTIC APPROACHES AND TOOLS WITHIN CAT 41: Kim Dent-Brown: Adapting the six-part story method (6PSM) to CAT 42: Pam Jameson: Incorporating compassion focused therapy into CAT: Theory, perspectives, and applications 43: Mark J. Walker: Incorporating eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing (EMDR) into CAT 44: Yvonne J. Stevens and Vicky Petratou: Creativity in CAT and the contributions of arts therapies to its theory and practice 45: Tim Sheard: Embodiment as a relational resource in CAT when working with developmental trauma 46: Cal Nield: CAT and technology: Where do we meet? SECTION NINE: PROFESSIONAL ISSUES AND REFLECTIVE PRACTICE 47: Lindsay Jones and Phyllis Annesley: Developing relational reflective practice for individuals and teams: The 4Ps framework 48: Yvonne J. Stevens and Jay Dudley: Relational supervision in CAT 49: Dawn Bennett, Liz Fawkes, and Yvonne J. Stevens: Training in CAT 50: Glenys Parry and Dawn Bennett: Competence in CAT 51: Henrietta Batchelor: Ethics and CAT: Dare to be aware SECTION TEN: CONCLUSION 52: Ian B. Kerr and Hilary Beard: Future developments and challenges for the current CAT model APPENDIX: CAT TOOLS Psychotherapy file Psychotherapy file (adapted) The personality structure questionnaire (PSQ) The states description procedure (SDP) Psycho-social checklist Life chart Rating sheets (2 examples)

Dr Laura Brummer is a clinical director for Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, a consultant clinical psychologist and accredited cognitive analytic therapist and supervisor. Laura gained her DClinPsy from the University of Southampton and a PgDip in professional practice in health care (leadership and innovation) from Bucks New University. She gained her accreditation as a cognitive analytic therapist with Sheffield Hallam University and is also accredited with the Society for Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (SfDBT) as a therapist and supervisor. Laura has spent her career in psychology working in mental health services in the NHS. Laura has a special interest and passion for working with adults with mental health needs and improving how the NHS delivers services to working age adults and older people. Alongside her clinical work, Laura has co-authored 'Cognitive Analytic Therapy, Distinctive Features' published in 2018, as well as a number of research articles. Dr Marisol Cavieres is a principal clinical psychologist, and accredited cognitive analytic therapist, supervisor, trainer, and moderator of cognitive analytic therapy (CAT) training courses. Marisol gained her BSc (Hons) and DClinPsy from the University of Liverpool. Throughout her career, Marisol has worked in adult mental health within the NHS and independent practice, in the UK and New Zealand (NZ). Over the past two decades Marisol has provided a range of accredited CAT trainings in the UK and internationally. She was course director for accredited CAT skills courses and helped to establish CAT training within NZ. Marisol has a particular interest in the adaptation of CAT as a brief intervention within acute mental health in-patient settings, and the use of reformulation to emphasise a relational perspective to provision of care. Marisol works for Avon and Wiltshire Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust as the lead clinical psychologist for acute care in Wiltshire. Dr. Ranil Tan is a consultant clinical psychologist, and accredited cognitive analytic therapist and supervisor. Ranil gained his BSc (Hons) from York University, and his DClinPsy from the Universities of Keele and Staffordshire. Ranil works for the Leeds and York Partnerships NHS Foundation Trust, and has worked in the NHS for 20 years. Ranil has predominantly worked in specialist services for those with experiences of psychosis and those who have complex emotional and interpersonal difficulties (across both community and inpatient settings). Ranil has a particular interest in relational approaches to mental health care, as well as the social and political sources of distress. He has published a number of articles in these areas. Ranil is involved in the development and delivery of workshops and training in relation to CAT both within and outside of the NHS.

See Also