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Narrative Exposure Therapy (NET) For Survivors of Traumatic Stress 3rd edition [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 220 pages, kõrgus x laius: 279x215 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Feb-2025
  • Kirjastus: Hogrefe Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 088937595X
  • ISBN-13: 9780889375956
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 220 pages, kõrgus x laius: 279x215 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 10-Feb-2025
  • Kirjastus: Hogrefe Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 088937595X
  • ISBN-13: 9780889375956
Teised raamatud teemal:
Extensive evidence shows that six to ten sessions of narrative exposure therapy (NET) can be sufficient to provide considerable relief from events such as organized violence, torture, war, rape, and childhood abuse. The new manual is even more clearly structured and easy-to-follow, and includes new figures that help illustrate and guide the reader through the steps of NET. The theoretical sections offer a solid basis for carrying out the therapeutic intervention. The reader is then shown the NET approach step by step, with robust and straightforward practical advice and tools, including how to deal with challenging situations, e.g., how to go deeper when faced with the challenging dynamics of remembering trauma, and how to manage dissociation, avoidance, strong emotions, lost memories, or the sudden emergence of unexpected recollections from the past. NET therapy conversations and resulting narrations from trauma scenes demonstrate the level of narrative exposure details required. Finally, the importance of reading back the testimony to the individual is explained.

A new section on the variations of NET details how to offer KIDNET for children and young people, FORNET for victims of trauma who are perpetrators of violence, NETfacts for communities, and ElderNET for older adults as well as online NET (eNET). Experienced therapists also get an idea of how NET is typically trained and how to facilitate NET exercises. Downloadable resources include an informed consent form and checklists for the therapist.

This book is an invaluable resource for clinical psychologists, psychotherapists, psychiatrists, counsellors, crisis workers, social workers, health workers, and physicians.
About the Authors
Preface
Acknowledgments
1 Introduction: Voices of Victims
2 Theoretical Base
Traumatic Stress
Traumatic Events
Stress and the Defense Cascade
Violence: The Major Source of Traumatic Stress
The Concept of PTSD
Psychosocial Problems and Comorbid Disorders
in Adults and Children
PTSD and Drug Abuse
PTSD and Physical Health
Vulnerability for PTSD
Culture and Symptoms of the Trauma Spectrum
Social Trauma
Rationale of NET
Nature of Traumatic Memory
Sensory-Perceptual Representation
Autobiographical Contextual Memory
Neurobiological Basis of Memory and Trauma
Disorders
Processing of Affective Experiences
Regulation of Emotions
Implications for Treatment
Speechlessness of Trauma: Sociopolitical
Implications
Model of Narrative Exposure Therapy
NET Characteristics and Principles
Activating Memory Associations - NET in a
Nutshell
3. The Therapeutic Approach of NET
Basic Procedure of NET
NET Process Step by Step
Step 1: Event Intake Checklist, Structured
Assessment of Trauma Reactions, and
Psychoeducation
Step 2: Building the Lifeline as an Autobiographical
Review
Step 3: Narrative Exposure
Sample Transcript of a Narrative Exposure
Conversation
Trusting Narrative Exposure in the Face of the
Typical Trauma Memory Dynamics
4 NET For Groups With Special Needs And
Requirements
KIDNET: Narrative Exposure Therapy For Children
And Adolescents
KIDNET Step 1 Structured Diagnostic Interview
Including Event Checklists With the child
KIDNET Step 2: Lifeline With Children - Make It
a Play!
KIDNET Step 3: Narrative Exposure
Forensic Offender Rehabilitation NET For
Ex-Combattants
Violence Breeds Violence - How and Why?
Torn Between Victory And defeat - Associative
Memory Network of the Fighter
Forensic Offender Rehabilitation (FOR-) NET or
NET for Ex-Combattants
NET for Groups and Traumatized Communities
(NETfacts)
ElderNET: NET as a Trauma-Memory Focused
Treatment for Older Adults
Obstacles and Specifics of Trauma Treatment in
Old and Very Old Age
The Past as a Resource - Reminiscence Through
ElderNET
Adjustments of the NET Steps for ElderNET
Protocol
eNET - Delivering NET via the Internet
Introduction
Structure of eNET
General Elements for eNET Sessions
5 Challenging Moments in the Therapeutic
Process
Avoidance
Etiology and Treatment of Trauma-Induced
Dissociation
General Characteristic of dissociation
Punishment Increases the Tendency to Dissociate
Me in the Eyes of the Other - Shame and Guilt and
the Threat to Human Life
Difference Between Guilt and Shame
Guilt
Shame
Other Challenges
Narrator is Withholding Information
There Seems to Be No Physiological and
Emotional Relieve
Therapist's Avoidance
6 Interpreters in Narrative Exposure Therapy
7 Teaching Narrative Exposure in Small Group
Work
References
Appendix: Tools and Resources
Maggie Schauer, PhD, is a psychotraumatologist at the University of Konstanz, Germany. Together with Frank Neuner and Thomas Elbert, she has developed Narrative Exposure Therapy (NET). Maggie is a founding member of the NGO vivo international, of the NGO BabyForum (counteracting neglect and maltreatment in early childhood), and of the NET Institute. She is constantly training the next generations of psychotherapists and mental health professionals, as well as psychosocial skills to support survivors of trauma.



Frank Neuner, PhD, is the head of the Clinical Psychology Department at Bielefeld University, including the university's outpatient clinic. He has gained international reputation for the co-development of NET. Frank published the first randomized treatment trial for posttraumatic stress disorder with refugees living in a war region, which was followed by a series of wide published randomized controlled trials of his working group.

Thomas Elbert, PhD, specializes in research on the consequences of social and traumatic stress. He has conducted laboratory and clinical studies as well as field studies and care projects directly in conflict areas. Moreover, his research team has asked what motivates people to perpetrate violence, whether domestic or in organized groups. Thomas is a member of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina, the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences, and the Academia Europaea.