000 01896cam a2200205 4500
001 041506242X
008 100609t1991 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a041506242X
100 _aScott, Jan (ed)
245 0 _aCognitive therapy in clinical practice: an illustrative casebook
260 _aLondon
_bRoutledge
_c1991
300 _a255; ill.,bibls.; Rec: Dr Stirling Moorey, Consultant Psychiatrist, Hackney Hospital
505 _aContents: Foreword by Aaron T. Beck Chapter One Severely depressed in-patients Ivy M. Blackburn Chapter Two Panic Disorder and Agoraphobia Ruth L. Greenberg Chapter Three Obsessions and Compulsions Paul M. Salkovskis Chapter Four Hypochondriasis Hilary M.C. Warwick and Paul M. Salkovskis Chapter Five Cancer Patients Jan Scott Chapter Six Eating Disorder Shelley Channon and Jane Wardle Chapter Seven Drug Abusers Stirling Moorey Chapter Eight Offenders Amanda Cole Chapter Nine Suicidal Patients J. Mark G. Williams and Jonathon Wells Chapter Ten The Wider Application of Cognitive Therapy: The End of the Beginning Mark G. Williams and Stirling Moorey.
520 _aPaperback
520 _aSince the publication of Aaron Beck's Cognitive Therapy in 1967, cognitive therapy has established itself as one of the major ways of treating depression. Its applications are, however, much wider and it is being used in an increasingly broad range of clinical situations - with the physically ill, the hypochondriacal, obsessional patients, and those with eating problems, for example. Cognitive Therapy in Clinical Practice discusses the use of cognitive therapy in these and other contexts. It combines an overview of the state of the art with case studies that demonstrate the particular applications of cognitive therapy.
650 _aCOGNITIVE THERAPY, methods
700 _aWilliams, J. Mark G. (ed)
700 _aBeck, Aaron T. (ed)
999 _c82356
_d82356