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E-raamat: Treating Trauma in Adolescents: Development, Attachment, and the Therapeutic Relationship

(Antioch University New England, United States)
  • Formaat: 284 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Dec-2016
  • Kirjastus: Guilford Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781462528585
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  • Formaat: 284 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Dec-2016
  • Kirjastus: Guilford Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781462528585

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This book presents an innovative and empathic approach to working with traumatized teens. It offers strategies for getting through to high-risk adolescents and for building a strong attachment relationship that can help get development back on track. Martha B. Straus draws on extensive clinical experience as well as cutting-edge research on attachment, developmental trauma, and interpersonal neurobiology. Vivid case material shows how to engage challenging or reluctant clients, implement interventions that foster self-regulation and an integrated sense of identity, and tap into both the teen's and the therapist's moment-to-moment emotional experience. Essential topics include ways to involve parents and other caregivers in treatment.
 

Arvustused

"This beautifully crafted book weaves together attachment theory, neurobiology, and adolescent development with the author's years of masterful practice as an individual and family therapist. The case descriptions of traumatized, hard-to-reach teens draw the curtain back on how to use language and the therapeutic relationship to connect and heal when there has been abuse, loss, and rupture. Straus combines the language of a gifted storyteller with the erudition of a scholar. A beginning therapist will find comfort and inspiration in Straus's generous sharing of her own work, and the most seasoned therapist will feel enlivened and enriched as well."--Anne K. Fishel, PhD, Director, Family and Couples Therapy Program, Massachusetts General Hospital; Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

"Straus gives us the rare treat of inviting us into her therapy room to be witness to the authentic, reciprocal, intimate relationships with her teen clients that are the fabric of healing in her relational model of treatment. This book brings the attachment literature to life in a new way and helps therapists understand their own relational strengths and weaknesses. Case examples of teens with varying attachment styles show how building a therapeutic relationship, over time, can integrate the self and overcome the disruptions caused by early trauma. I found the cases moving, the theoretical analysis enlightening, and the modeling of a warm, honest, related, and constantly struggling therapeutic stance a beautiful example to emulate."--Joyanna Silberg, PhD, Senior Child Trauma Consultant, Sheppard Pratt Health System; President, Leadership Council on Child Abuse and Interpersonal Violence

"Rarely in our field does one find a voice so research-anchored, clinically precise, and utterly human at the same time. Straus demonstrates how to consistently 'show up'--to maintain a therapeutic connection when struggling with real kids, real therapy, and real trauma. The accessibility of her teaching is remarkable, making the book relevant to both trainees and deeply experienced clinicians. In a therapeutic landscape divided between protocol-driven and vague eclectic approaches, this book 'holds the center,' where most therapists and adolescents fitfully live with each other. Straus's approach can restore health to kids frozen by life events, in ways that will open the hearts of therapists as well."--Ron Taffel, PhD, Chairand Founding Director of Family and Couples Treatment Services, Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy, New York City

"Straus provides a comprehensive description of her psychotherapy model for adolescents, as well as a glimpse of the creative therapist who developed it. She thoroughly presents the core principles of her approach, which rests soundly on theory and research. The many case presentations attest to the importance of developing, maintaining, and continuously repairing connections with adolescents in order to help them resolve attachment trauma and develop an integrated self. This book will find a place in the frequently-referred-to section of the bookcases of both beginning and experienced therapists who have the privilege of entering the lives of these isolated young people."--Daniel Hughes, PhD, private practice, Annville, Pennsylvania -The book is at once rigorously scientific and deeply personal, returning psychotherapy to a place of possibility for growth, creativity, and discovery.Through clinical vignettes, Straus offers a window into her intimate encounters with deeply wounded, fragile adolescents.The lessons meticulously described in this well-researched book echo the wisdom of the great poets, artists, and sages. The age of evidence-based medicine has circled back to love as the most essential healing element. Straus persuasively argues for a return to improvisational, exploratory therapy, focused in the here and now. This book is an invitation to drop your agenda, abandon control, and submit to the chaos and uncertainty of the human experience.--Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 11/1/2017The author's kindness, verbal intelligence, self-reflection, and capacity for integrating developmental neuroscience into psychotherapy represent a giant step toward effective work with adolescents, and with developmental trauma. Her ability to organize a coherent theory, beginning with theoretical underpinnings and proceeding through what she considers the essential ingredients of an effective therapeutic relationship with developmentally traumatized individuals, supports a psychodynamic, humanistic approach to therapy that is sorely needed and makes her case histories come alive.Both beginning and seasoned clinicians will benefit from this....Its presence on one's bookshelf will provide inspiration and occasional reference long after its reading.This book represents a rather large step toward the development of a vocabulary and a treatment paradigm for addressing the 'ongoing expression and enduring cascade' (p.31) of developmental trauma.Providing a deeply wounded adolescent with the opportunity to experience himself or herself in relationship to others, and to experience affect in the presence of a safer other who is both skillful and committed, is sacred work. It is also neuropsychological work, and when an author can clearly articulate in both domains, with consummate writing, her work is an important contribution to the psychotherapy literature.--PsycCRITIQUES, 7/10/2017This book on treating developmental trauma in adolescents is an excellent addition to the developmental field in general and more specifically to those working with hard-to-reach teenagers. The developmental stance and the attachment theory approach combines uniquely in creating a model for working with adolescents affected by difficult trauma in their families.One aspect that makes this book unique is the emphasis on the therapeutic relationship and its importance for positive outcomes in therapy.The use of case presentations makes the book come alive for practitioners. This is a much-needed addition to the developmental field as well as the trauma literature!--Doody's Review Service, 5/5/2017 "This beautifully crafted book weaves together attachment theory, neurobiology, and adolescent development with the author's years of masterful practice as an individual and family therapist. The case descriptions of traumatized, hard-to-reach teens draw the curtain back on how to use language and the therapeutic relationship to connect and heal when there has been abuse, loss, and rupture. Straus combines the language of a gifted storyteller with the erudition of a scholar. A beginning therapist will find comfort and inspiration in Straus's generous sharing of her own work, and the most seasoned therapist will feel enlivened and enriched as well."--Anne K. Fishel, PhD, Director, Family and Couples Therapy Program, Massachusetts General Hospital; Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

"Straus gives us the rare treat of inviting us into her therapy room to be witness to the authentic, reciprocal, intimate relationships with her teen clients that are the fabric of healing in her relational model of treatment. This book brings the attachment literature to life in a new way and helps therapists understand their own relational strengths and weaknesses. Case examples of teens with varying attachment styles show how building a therapeutic relationship, over time, can integrate the self and overcome the disruptions caused by early trauma. I found the cases moving, the theoretical analysis enlightening, and the modeling of a warm, honest, related, and constantly struggling therapeutic stance a beautiful example to emulate."--Joyanna Silberg, PhD, Senior Child Trauma Consultant, Sheppard Pratt Health System; President, Leadership Council on Child Abuse and Interpersonal Violence

"Rarely in our field does one find a voice so research-anchored, clinically precise, and utterly human at the same time. Straus demonstrates how to consistently 'show up'--to maintain a therapeutic connection when struggling with real kids, real therapy, and real trauma. The accessibility of her teaching is remarkable, making the book relevant to both trainees and deeply experienced clinicians. In a therapeutic landscape divided between protocol-driven and vague eclectic approaches, this book 'holds the center,' where most therapists and adolescents fitfully live with each other. Straus's approach can restore health to kids frozen by life events, in ways that will open the hearts of therapists as well."--Ron Taffel, PhD, Chairand Founding Director of Family and Couples Treatment Services, Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy, New York City

"Straus provides a comprehensive description of her psychotherapy model for adolescents, as well as a glimpse of the creative therapist who developed it. She thoroughly presents the core principles of her approach, which rests soundly on theory and research. The many case presentations attest to the importance of developing, maintaining, and continuously repairing connections with adolescents in order to help them resolve attachment trauma and develop an integrated self. This book will find a place in the frequently-referred-to section of the bookcases of both beginning and experienced therapists who have the privilege of entering the lives of these isolated young people."--Daniel Hughes, PhD, private practice, Annville, Pennsylvania -The book is at once rigorously scientific and deeply personal, returning psychotherapy to a place of possibility for growth, creativity, and discoveryâ¦.Through clinical vignettes, Straus offers a window into her intimate encounters with deeply wounded, fragile adolescentsâ¦.The lessons meticulously described in this well-researched book echo the wisdom of the great poets, artists, and sages. The age of evidence-based medicine has circled back to love as the most essential healing element. Straus persuasively argues for a return to improvisational, exploratory therapy, focused in the here and now. This book is an invitation to drop your agenda, abandon control, and submit to the chaos and uncertainty of the human experience.--Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 11/1/2017ÆÆThe author's kindness, verbal intelligence, self-reflection, and capacity for integrating developmental neuroscience into psychotherapy represent a giant step toward effective work with adolescents, and with developmental trauma. Her ability to organize a coherent theory, beginning with theoretical underpinnings and proceeding through what she considers the essential ingredients of an effective therapeutic relationship with developmentally traumatized individuals, supports a psychodynamic, humanistic approach to therapy that is sorely needed and makes her case histories come aliveâ¦.Both beginning and seasoned clinicians will benefit from this....Its presence on one's bookshelf will provide inspiration and occasional reference long after its readingâ¦.This book represents a rather large step toward the development of a vocabulary and a treatment paradigm for addressing the 'ongoing expression and enduring cascade' (p.31) of developmental traumaâ¦.Providing a deeply wounded adolescent with the opportunity to experience himself or herself in relationship to others, and to experience affect in the presence of a safer other who is both skillful and committed, is sacred work. It is also neuropsychological work, and when an author can clearly articulate in both domains, with consummate writing, her work is an important contribution to the psychotherapy literature.--PsycCRITIQUES, 7/10/2017ÆÆThis book on treating developmental trauma in adolescents is an excellent addition to the developmental field in general and more specifically to those working with hard-to-reach teenagers. The developmental stance and the attachment theory approach combines uniquely in creating a model for working with adolescents affected by difficult trauma in their familiesâ¦.One aspect that makes this book unique is the emphasis on the therapeutic relationship and its importance for positive outcomes in therapyâ¦.The use of case presentations makes the book come alive for practitioners. This is a much-needed addition to the developmental field as well as the trauma literature!--Doody's Review Service, 5/5/2017

PART I THEORY
1 Attachment Theory in Development and Clinical Practice with Adolescents
3(25)
Attachment Theory in a Nutshell
6(8)
From Attachment Relationships to Attachment Styles
14(2)
Attachment Styles Grow Up
16(7)
Attachment and Psychopathology
23(1)
A Dimensional Attachment Framework for Intervention
24(1)
Treatment Implications
25(3)
2 The Legacy of Developmental Trauma in Adolescence
28(20)
Developmental Trauma Is Not PTSD
29(8)
Diagnosis of Developmental Trauma
37(10)
Concluding Thoughts
47(1)
3 Interpersonal Neurobiology and Co-Regulation of Affect
48(29)
Interpersonal Neurobiology
53(8)
Nine Domains of Integration
61(10)
IPNB and Psychotherapy
71(1)
Wrapping Up
71(6)
PART II DEVELOPMENTAL--RELATIONAL THERAPY
4 Developmental--Relational Therapy with Traumatized Teens
77(25)
Developmental--Relational Theory
78(5)
The Four M's of DRT: Mirroring, Mentalization, Mindfulness, and Modulation
83(6)
Connection and Authentic Emotion
89(10)
James Revisited
99(3)
5 Attachment Styles: Transference and Countertransference Revisited
102(31)
DRT: It Takes Two
104(7)
The Therapist's Attachment Style
111(9)
Attachment and the Transference Relationship
120(4)
Countertransference in Working with Adolescents
124(4)
Self-Disclosure and Enactments
128(3)
Dancing with Sally
131(2)
6 Getting Hooked and Unhooked
133(22)
React--Reflect--Respond
137(18)
PART III INTERVENTIONS
7 Increasing Connection with Preoccupied and Dismissive Adolescents
155(22)
Trauma Treatment for Teens Is Different
156(7)
Activation Is Not Retraumatization
163(14)
8 Treating Dissociative Adolescents: Alternative Strategies for Healing Disorganized/Fearful Attachment
177(25)
Dissociation and Trauma
179(5)
Disorganized/Unresolved Attachment and Trauma
184(3)
Treatment Implications
187(15)
9 Including Parents and Families in Treatment
202(32)
Finding Family
203(3)
Setting the Stage for Success
206(2)
The Impact of Developmental Trauma on Caregivers
208(2)
The Danger Might Be Real
210(2)
Culture and Context
212(1)
Family Therapy for Adolescent Developmental Trauma
213(4)
Four Strategies for Changing Caregiver and Adolescent IWMs
217(4)
Increasing Emotional Communication
221(1)
Four Strategies for Increasing Emotional Communication
222(12)
10 The Corrective Relational Ending
234(21)
Therapeutic Endings
235(1)
Bowlby Redux
236(2)
A Few General Recommendations for Ending
238(3)
Premature Termination
241(3)
And It's Not Really the End, Anyway
244(1)
Expect and Predict Hard Times Ahead
245(1)
Step Down from the Pedestal
246(2)
Therapist Termination Anxiety
248(2)
A Few Termination Rituals
250(3)
After Termination, There's Still a Relationship
253(2)
References 255(20)
Index 275
Martha B. Straus, PhD, is Professor in the Department of Clinical Psychology at Antioch University New England in Keene, New Hampshire. Her research interests focus on attachment relationships in adolescence and emerging adulthood, outcomes for adoptive and foster children, and interventions for traumatized children and adolescents. Dr. Straus has published several books, including Abuse and Victimization across the Life Span,Violence in the Lives of Adolescents, No-Talk Therapy for Children and Adolescents, and Adolescent Girls in Crisis. She also has written many journal articles and presents and consults internationally on child and family trauma, development, and therapy. She maintains a small general private practice in Vermont.