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E-raamat: Breaking Free from OCD: A CBT Guide for Young People and Their Families

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-May-2008
  • Kirjastus: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781846427992
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
  • Hind: 20,98 €*
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  • See e-raamat on mõeldud ainult isiklikuks kasutamiseks. E-raamatuid ei saa tagastada.
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-May-2008
  • Kirjastus: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781846427992

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Part of the Reading Well scheme. 35 books selected by young people and health professionals to provide 13 to 18 year olds with high-quality support, information and advice about common mental health issues and related conditions.

Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is a potentially life-long debilitating disorder, which often emerges during teenage years and affects as many as 1 in every 50 people. Young people living with OCD experience recurrent obsessions or compulsions that are distressing and interfere with their social lives, relationships, educational functioning and careers.

Written by leading experts on OCD, this step-by-step guide is written for adolescents with OCD and their families, to be used in home treatment or as a self-help book. Using the principles of cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), which is the proven method for helping those with OCD, it offers teenagers a structured plan of treatment which can be read alone, or with a parent, counsellor or mental health worker. The guide provides useful advice and worksheets throughout.

This self-help book for young people is an invaluable resource for adolescents who have suffered from, or know someone who has suffered from, OCD, their families, teachers, carers, and mental health professionals.

Arvustused

The book takes readers through the treatment of OCD in logical manner, making it really easy to follow an understand for young people and their parents. -- Youth in Mind It is written by four experts in the field who all specialise in OCD and children/young adults. It is written in a very approachable, non-threatening tone without being patronising or over-simplified... I would not hesitate to recommend this book to anyone dealing with a young person with OCD. -- ASTeens Breaking Free from OCD should be a staple book for OCD sufferers and their families. It ditches confusing medical jargon in order to give constructive and helpful information and advice. It is the kind of book which I wish I had owned when my OCD was at its worst, one which shows that there is light at the end of the tunnel, and shows you how to get there. -- Joe Wells, author of Touch and Go Joe: An Adolescent's Experience of OCD Do you have troublesome habits that get in the way? Do you have worries that bother you much more than you should? THIS BOOK MAY BE FOR YOU. The hardest thing for anyone to control is their own mind. This book points the way, to you and to those close to you, to free yourself from OCD. -- James F. Leckman, MD, Neison Harris Professor of Child Psychiatry, Pediatrics and Psychology, Director of Research, Child Study Center, Yale University In this marvellous book the authors provide the key information that teens and families need about OCD and its treatment. Highly recommended not only for patients but also for practitioners looking for material to use in their practices. -- John S. March, MD, MPH, Professor and Chief, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Program for Child Affective & Anxiety Disorders, Duke University This is an excellent self-help book for young people who are suffering from OCD and their families and/or carers but it is also an invaluable resource for clinicians, teachers and other professionals who may be working with children with these difficulties. There are several excellent self-help books for OCD currently available but, as a mental health professional working in this area, I consider this to be one of the best I have come across. -- Nasen Special When I discovered that my child had OCD I read many books on the subject but none as clear or well laid out as this one. I wish I'd had this to read right at the start...essential reading for anyone who has been recently diagnosed with OCD or suspects that their child may be suffering from it. -- Journal of Mental Health The guide does offer some excellent information for parents who want to tackle their child's OCD so I would most definitely recommend it to them. -- Children & Young People Now I found this an extremely encouraging book, accessible to young people and adults alike, also doctors, teachers, family members and mental health workers, in fact anyone who wishes to understand more about Obsessive Compulsive Disorder, a troublesome condition that is often kept secret but is actually far more common than people realise. -- No Panic Magazine I knew when I was presented with this book I was reading a something quality from a leading expert. This book is definitely ideal for young people and their families. -- OCD Today Breaking Free From OCD is written by a range of experts in the field who have extensive knowledge and experience of working with children and young people with this disorder. The book is, I feel, an invaluable step-by-step guide for young people and their families as well as being an excellent resource for the counsellor/therapists. -- Counselling Children and Young People This clever book cuts through the clutter of medical jargon providing an easy to follow approach to overcoming obsessive thoughts and behaviors. With advice for parents and exercises for children and teens, the authors reassure the entire family while offering concrete ways to "break free". -- Inside TSA: The Quarterly Newsletter of the National Tourette Syndrome Association, Inc. It is easy to read, absorb and understand with definitions introduced slowly, clearly and repeated at intervals, along with real examples to perhaps identify with... I would not hesitate to recommend this book to anyone dealing with a young person with OCD. -- BFK Books Breaking Free from OCD (...) is presented as a "self-treatment programme", which aims to: (a) explain what OCD is; and (b) how to fix it... The book includes a broad range of useful worksheets... Each chapter contains a final section entitles "Advice for Parents or Carers", which is designed to support and guide the "young person" completing the programme... This resource may be useful for a school counsellor parent, or trusted adult, who could use it as the basis for supporting a young person presenting with OCD. -- Flannan Geaney, Chartered EP * Debate - British Psychological Society *

Muu info

A step-by-step Cognitive Behavioural Therapy plan for adolescents with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
PART A: Understanding Your OCD
Chapter 1: About this Book
13
Why should I read this book?
How should I use this book?
What are the treatments for OCD?
Summary
Advice for parents or carers: Recommended treatments
Chapter 2: What is OM
19
So what is OCD?
The various symptoms of OCD
Some information about your thoughts
Do I have OCD?
Summary
Advice for parents or carers: What is obsessive compulsive disorder?
Does my child have OCD?
Why does my child have OCD?
Chapter 3: Can I Get Better from OCB?
31
How to get help
What are the treatments for OCD?
How do we know treatments work?
Summary
Advice for parents or carers: Getting help for your child with OCD
What if my child does not want help?
What assessment will the doctor do, and what treatments will be recommended?
Chapter 4: What is Cognitive Behaviour Therapy?
40
Cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) for OCD
Some facts about CBT for OCD
Summary
Advice for parents or carers
Chapter 5: Understanding My OCD
46
Understanding your obsessions and compulsions
The OCD trap
How does your OCD trap work?
Drawing your own OCD trap
What does OCD make me avoid?
What would life be like without OCD?
Summary
Advice for parents or carers Your child's obsessions and compulsions
How has OCD affected the family?
PART B: NOW to Recover from Your OCII
Chapter 6: Now to Use this Book to Change Your OCD
61
Measuring your OCD
Summary
Advice for parents or carers: How to help
Summary
Chapter 7: Understanding the Role of Anxiety
60
What is anxiety?
The physical effects of anxiety
When is anxiety helpful?
When is anxiety unhelpful?
Can anxiety harm me?
Habituation or 'getting used to' anxiety
An 'anxiety thermometer'
Using an anxiety thermometer' to rate how you feel about doing a task
Using an 'anxiety thermometer' to rate how you feel over time
Anxiety graphs
Summary
Advice for parents or carers
Chapter 8: What doew My OCD Look Like?
80
What are my OCD problems?
Keeping an OCD diary
Making an OCD ladder
Deciding where to start: What should I do next?
Summary
Advice for parents or carers: Summary
Chapter 9: Designing Exposure and Response Prevention Exercises
94
What is exposure and response prevention (E/RP)
Designing your first E/RP exercise
Learning to break OCD's rules
Doing your first E/RP exercise
Updating your OCD ladder: What should I do next?
Summary
Advice for parents or carers: Summary
Chapter 10: Making Progress with Exposure and Response Prevention Exercises
110
How to do more exposure and response prevention (E/RP) exercises
Making sense of your findings
What to do if you get stuck
What should I do if others are involved in my OCD?
What should I do next?
Summary
Advice for parents or carers: When OCD involves you
How to withdraw from OCD's demands
What to do about reassurance seeking
Summary
Chapter 11: Overcoming Difficulties
120
Questions and answers
What should I do next?
Summary
Advice for parents or carers: Summary
Chapter 12: What Is the Role of My Thoughts?
132
How important are your thoughts?
What are typical OCD thoughts?
Thinking helpful thoughts
What to say to OCD
How to think helpful thoughts
More about fighting back with helpful thoughts
What should I do next?
Summary
Advice for parents or carers: Summary
Chapter 13: Row Can I Challenge My Thoughts?
147
Learning to put OCD worries on trial
How to make a responsibility pie-chart
What should I do next?
Summary
Advice for parents or carers: When obsessional thoughts involve you
Summary
Chapter 14: How Can I Test Whether My Thoughts Will Come True?
150
What is a behavioural experiment?
Why should I do behavioural experiments?
How do behavioural experiments work?
How to carry out a behavioural experiment
How to overcome problems with behavioural experiments
What should I do next?
Check your progress
Summary
Advice for parents or carers: How to help your child understand his or her beliefs
Summary
Chapter 15: How to Maintain the Gains I Have Made
173
When might OCD try to reappear?
What might OCD look like if it tries to reappear?
What other things can I do?
What goals do I have for my life?
Summary
Advice for parents or carers
PART C: OCD and the Bigger Picture
Chapter 16: OCD and My Family
How does OCD affect families?
You can overcome OCD
Frequently asked questions (FAQs)
Advice for parents or carers
Chapter 17: OCD, School and friends
OCD and school
OCD and your friends
Telling your friends about OCD
Chapter 18: Where to Go for :don Information
201
Books for young people
Books for children
Books for parents or carers
Websites
APPENDIX: QUESTIONNAIRE 206
Jo Derisley, ClinPsyD, AFBPsS, DipCogTher, is Honorary Senior Lecturer at the University of East Anglia, and Consultant Clinical Psychologist at the Norfolk & Waveney Mental Health Care Trust, UK. She has written several articles on the subject. Sarah Robinson, BSc, is Assistant Psychologist at the national and specialist OCD and related disorders clinic for children and young people at the Maudsley Hospital, UK. Cynthia Turner, PhD, MClinPsych, is Honorary Lecturer at the King's College Institute of Psychiatry, London and Senior Clinical Psychologist at the national and specialist OCD clinic for children and young people, Maudsley Hospital, UK. She specialises in the treatment of OCD and anxiety disorders in young people, and has written treatment programs for these disorders, as well as book chapters and scientific articles.